Search Results for: United Nations
10 results out of 4207 results found for 'United Nations'.
SPAIN FINDS SILVER LININGS AMID THE GLOOM
‘LA TORRE PUIG,’ the 22-storey Puig Tower now being fitted out in the Plaza de Europa, of the Catalan capital, Barcelona, for Puig SL, the family owned fragrances and fashion firm, will be yet another landmark building for one of Europe’s most beautiful cities.…
SOUTH SUDAN STARTS TO GROW A PERSONAL CARE PRODUCT MARKET
Edward Shirobo Otieno knows buying cosmetics and beauty products are not going to be a priority for the vast majority of South Sudan’s 10 million people at this time. In the world’s newest country, independent since July 2011, more than 80% of its consumers live on less than USD1 a day.…
MIDDLE EAST COSMETICS MARKETS DIVIDED: GULF BOOMS WHILE LEVANT STRUGGLES
PERSONAL care product market in the Middle East can be divided into two current trends: sales in the affluent Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries are booming, while on the other side of the region, in the Levant, markets are feeling the effects of the Syrian conflict, with the loss of tourists and low consumer confidence impacting bottom lines.…
LATIN AMERICA – MAJOR GROWTH ZONE FOR PERSONAL CARE PRODUCT SECTOR
WHILE it is hard to generalise about a region as diverse as Latin America, the truth is that many of its consumers are more concerned about personal appearance than is typical elsewhere in the world, and that is good news for the personal care product industry.…
EU PREPARED TO BE FLEXIBLE IN RECOGNISING AMERICAN TEXTILE REGULATIONS TO SECURE TRADE DEAL
THE TEXTILE sectors of the European Union (EU) and the United States are keeping a close eye on negotiations under way to create a planned EU-US Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership. This would be the world’s largest bilateral trade deal, and would aim to go beyond standard trade agreements by addressing technical rules that can impede trades in manufactured goods such as textiles, such as labelling, classification and chemical controls.…
EU-US FTA COULD PUSH WORLD TOWARDS FIRST NEW GLOBAL STANDARD FOR CAR SAFETY
THE NEGOTIATIONS for a free trade agreement (FTA) between the European Union (EU) and the United States, which started this month in Washington DC (July 8), could push the world towards a truly global vehicle regulatory system for the first time, according to EU sources close to the negotiations.…
HOW KOREAN CARMAKERS HAVE CAPITALIZED ON THE EU-SOUTH KOREA FTA
WHILE the European Union’s (EU) auto sector is happy to see its trade imbalance with South Korea decreasing two years into the controversial free trade agreement (FTA) linking these two vehicle-making powerhouses, European car makers complain that they are still struggling to access the South Korean market.…
NEW YORK CITY – AMERICA’S METROPOLIS HAS SCALED-UP TRAFFIC CONTROLS
IN the most populous city in the United States (population of about 8.34 million as of July 2012, traffic managers in New York City employ inter-agency cooperation and high tech solutions to fight congestion. “The New York City department of transportation has a very sophisticated traffic management system,” said José Holguín-Veras, director of the New York-based Centre for Infrastructure, Transportation and the Environment.…
CONNECTED SOUTH KOREA HAS SOPHISTICATED TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEM
As befits a country as connected online as South Korea traffic controls in its capital Seoul are organised centrally and in an integrated way. As one of the world’s largest cities, with a population exceeding 10 million, Seoul has notoriously heavy traffic.…
‘PIGS’ COUNTRIES’ PUBLIC AND ROAD TRANSPORT SERVICES STRUGGLE WITH MASSIVE GOVERNMENT CUTS
THE ACRONYM ‘PIGS’ to mean Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain, was never very kind. It was abusive European Union (EU) jargon claiming that these countries were poor and their governments, profligate. Sadly, the international financial crisis showed that there was some truth in this and the four countries have since 2008 had to slash public spending to stave off national bankruptcy, and their collective road and public transport sectors have suffered.…