Search Results for: Spain
10 results out of 1842 results found for 'Spain'.
EUROPEAN COMMISSION ANNOUNCED LEGAL PROTECTION FOR EIGHT MORE FOOD PRODUCTS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
ANOTHER eight traditionally made European food products have been added to the European Union’s (EU) protected geographical indication lists, preventing these foodstuffs being copied by food manufacturers based outside the regions where they are traditionally manufactured.
Three of these newly protected products are from Portugal: a special rice – ‘Arroz Carolino das Lezírias Ribatejanas’; a smoked sausage ‘Alheira de Vinhais’; and a ham ‘Presunto de Vinhais’, also known as ‘Presunto Bísaro de Vinhais’.…
BRUSSELS "STOPS THE CLOCK" ON FOOD INGREDIENTS DEAL COMPETITION PROBE
BY ALAN OSBORN
THE EUROPEAN Commission has "put on hold" its investigation into the proposed acquisition of parts of the Netherlands food ingredients company GBI by Associated British Foods of the UK because certain information sought by Brussels had not arrived by the time of an inquiry deadline.…
GLOBAL TRANSPORT SECTOR PUSHES FORWARD ON HYDROGEN, AMIDST SOME SCEPTICISM
BY ALAN OSBORN
ANGLO-Dutch oil giant Shell is not in much doubt that hydrogen is one of the fuels of the future, if not the fuel of the future. Barely a month ago, in June, Duncan Macleod, (NOTE: SPELLING IS CORRECT) global vice president of Shell Hydrogen, told an clean technology conference in the US that Shell had restructured its organisation "to prepare for hydrogen’s transition into the mainstream, bringing it into our downstream fuels portfolio, alongside gasoline, diesel, LPG, CNG – as well as biofuels and GTL."…
MEDITERRANEANS TURNING AWAY FROM THEIR HEALTHY TRADITIONAL DIETS WARNS FAO
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE MUCH praised Mediterranean diet – relying on fresh fruits and vegetables – is being discarded by consumers in countries where it was created. The UN’s Food & Agriculture Organisation (FAO) is warning growing prosperity in southern Europe, and to some extent the Levant and north Africa, has led locals to eat fattier more calorific foods.…
GLOBAL: Higher education still tougher for women than men
By Keith Nuthall
It is almost a truism that women have a tougher time in most professions than men, and academia is no different. But it is worth considering the absurdity of this statement: that in the 21st century, it is still quite normal to assume that the success of an academic or student is likely to be affected by their gender.…
SMALL CARIBBEAN JURISDICTIONS STRUGGLE TO EFFECTIVELY REGULATE A CASINO SECTOR VULNERABLE TO MONEY LAUNDERERS
BY SUZANNE KOELEGA and JUHEL BROWNE
"CASINOS are an important part of the development of the Caribbean tourist sector, yet they hold a particular attraction to money launderers. Casinos provide the venues for large flows of cash, which launderers can utilise to disguise the true origins of their criminal proceeds."…
EUROPE STILL STRUGGLING TO CREATE EU-WIDE GAS MARKET - DESPITE LIBERALISATION LEGISLATION
BY ALAN OSBORN
FEW people would challenge the European Commission’s assertion earlier this year that, in practice, market integration in the gas market in the European Union (EU) "is still far from a success."
In its report Progress in Creating the Internal Gas and Electricity Market published in April, Brussels said that major barriers to the efficient functioning of the market still existed largely because of "insufficient implementation of European legislation."…
TRINIDAD MAKES PROGRESS IN FIGHTING ITS HOME GROWN ISLAMIC TERROR GROUP
BY JAMES FULLER
MANY nations have has to review their anti-terrorist financing systems and laws since the September 11 attacks in America, with its implications stretching around the world, even to regions usually untouched by political terror, such as the Caribbean.…
EUROPE: Mediterranean university launch approved by Paris summit
By Keith Nuthall
The launch of a new Euro-Mediterranean University in Slovenia dedicated to higher education courses focused on issues of importance to European, African and Levantine countries bordering the sea has been given a formal seal of approval. The creation of the institution was welcomed within a joint declaration issued by heads of state and government from 43 countries at a Paris summit launching a Mediterranean Union organisation.…
EU REGULATORS UNITED IN OPPOSITION TO EUROPEAN COMMISSION VETO PLANS
BY CHRIS JONES
EUROPEAN Union (EU) telecommunications Commissioner Viviane Reding faces significant opposition to her proposals for increasing the European Commission’s power of veto over national telecoms regulations (NRAs) and the creation of a new Europe-wide regulatory agency.
NRAs in the 27 member states, which together form the European Regulators’ Group (ERG), have made it quite clear that any attempt by Reding to undermine their authority will face fierce resistance.…