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Search Results for: United Nations

10 results out of 4207 results found for 'United Nations'.

EUROPE'S EMISSION TRADING SCHEME HITS CHOPPY WATERS - BUT OTHER NATIONAL SCHEMES SHOW MORE PROMISE



BY MARK ROWE

WHEN the European Union (EU) set up the world’s first carbon trading market in 2001, the Emissions Trading System (ETS), advocates heralded a new dawn: carbon pollution could be brought under control in a way that benefited the environment while not damaging industrial interests.…

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INDIAN MARBLE ASSOCIATION OPPOSES LOOSENING OF IMPORT CONTROLS FOR CHEAPER MARBLE



BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA, IN NEW DELHI, AND LEAH GERMAIN

THE LEADER of India’s key marble association stepped into an international row about his country’s marble trading policy, opposing the reduction of import restrictions, including marble import duties, on lower quality marble that is mined near Indian marble centre Kisharngarh.…

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INDONESIA COMES UNDER FIRE OVER MEAT IMPORT LICENSING



BY LEAH GERMAIN

THE UNITED States Trade Representative (USTR) has joined forces with the European Union (EU) to press Indonesia to simplify its licensing for meat and livestock imports. The US and Canada, with the support of the EU, Brazil, New Zealand, Japan and Switzerland, have complained to the World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) import licensing committee, claiming that Indonesia’s tough licensing for meat and livestock imports could seriously damage trade.…

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ANDES OFFER RICH SOURCE OF LUXURY FIBRES



BY PACIFICA GODDARD AND JONATHAN DYSON, IN LIMA

SOME of world’s most coveted fibres, Vicuña, Guanaco, Alpaca and Llama, all hail from rugged Andean region in South America. Vicuña fibre, known locally and in the trade as the "gold of the Andes" and "the fabric of the gods" is a key part of the global high-end luxury market for rare and superfine fibres.…

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OBAMA-NODA DEAL ON RARE EARTHS WELCOMED BY MINERAL EXPERTS IN JAPAN AND THE USA



BY LEAH GERMAIN AND MARTIN FOSTER, IN TOKYO

MOLYCORP Inc, the key United States rare earths producer, has welcomed a new partnership between the US and the Japanese government that seeks to diversify the global supply for rare earth metals. On April 30, President Obama met with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda to discuss the development of a joint critical minerals and development project – an alliance between the two countries, where they will share new technology used in the production and recycling of rare earths.…

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SPAIN VIEWS LONG TERM PRIZE IN LATIN AMERICA



BY ROBERT STOKES, IN MÁLAGA

JUST like El Dorado, the never-was city of gold, Latin America’s 390 million Spanish speakers, are a siren call to Spanish publishers, whose domestic market numbers just 46 million souls. There is even a side bet on 190 million Portuguese speaking Brazilians

Some publishers, lured by these big numbers, have tried and failed in the past, foundering on the reefs of censorship, economic and currency volatility, and the local business culture, though taking forever to get paid – if at all – should not have come as a shock to Spanish firms.…

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ALGAL R&D DEMONSTRATES MOMENTUM



BY ROBERT STOKES

ALGAE have been heralded as the universal raw material of the future for biofuels, agricultural feed, nutritional supplements, biochemicals and cosmetics. They gobble up CO2, can clean up waste water, and many will thrive in seawater when the fresh variety is usually limited to the sunnier climes where algae can be grown more cheaply.…

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ALGAL R&D DEMONSTRATES MOMENTUM



BY ROBERT STOKES

ALGAE have been heralded as the universal raw material of the future for biofuels, agricultural feed, nutritional supplements, biochemicals and cosmetics. They gobble up CO2, can clean up waste water, and many will thrive in seawater when the fresh variety is usually limited to the sunnier climes where algae can be grown more cheaply.…

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BURMA FACES TOUGH ROAD TO BECOME NEW ASIA KNITWEAR OUTSOURCER



BY KARRYN MILLER, MJ DESCHAMPS, LEAH GERMAIN AND KEITH NUTHALL

THE BYELECTION victories in Myanmar/Burma by opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her political allies have loosened the tough trade sanctions that have thus far hampered efforts to develop the country as a new sourcing hub for knitwear and other clothing products.…

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AMERICAN IRON AND STEEL INSTITUTE BACKS US GOVERNMENT STANCE ON INDIA DUTY ROW



BY LEAH GERMAIN

The US government’s anticipated tough stance against India in the two countries’ looming World Trade Organisation (WTO) case has been backed by the American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI). Speaking to Metal Bulletin, a spokesman said American countervailing duties were needed to protect the US steel industry from "injurious imports".…

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