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Search Results for: United Nations

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

GLOBAL: Universities offer elite anti-money laundering advice to organisations complying with anti-money laundering laws



By Alan Osborn

The world is not over-full of specialist academics at universities and colleges teaching anti-money laundering (AML) methods – but these important experts are out there if you look for them. Their low profile is partly because the subject is often subsumed into financial crime generally and partly because genuine AML skills can command a useful premium to banks and other major financial institutions better able to support lavish salaries and back-up systems.…

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SYNTHETIC FUELS TO SHAPE FUTURE BIOFUEL SECTOR



BY MARK ROWE

THE FUTURE of the oils and fats sector globally may be shaped in the coming years by the emergence of synthetic biology, which is enabling scientists to create oils and fats with enhanced properties.

This new technology has been developed in the wake of advances in biofuel manufacture, as the United Nations, major energy companies, scientists and environmental organisations all seek to identify the sources of energy that will sustain a post-oil world.…

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EU MINISTERS HARMONISE EU CHEMICAL LABELLING WITH GLOBAL STANDARDS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Union (EU) Council of Ministers has approved harmonising EU chemical labelling rules with those of the United Nations Globally Harmonised System. This will change some warning messages and pictograms, with the aim of making them better understood.…

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OIL INDUSTRY KEEPS MAKING PROFITS IN SRI LANKA, DESPITE CIVIL WAR



BY MUNZA MUSHTAQ

DOING business in a country wracked by civil war is never easy, and involves extra cost, but with care and good management, oil and gas companies can still turn profits in such circumstances. Sri Lanka is a good case in point: multinationals Shell, Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) and Chevron Lubricants are trading successfully in this country, even as its government’s armed conflict with Tamil Tiger separatists reaches an expected military climax.…

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RUSSIA'S PAINT AND COATINGS SECTOR POWERS ON DESPITE CREDIT CRUNCH



BY MARK ROWE

THE CREDIT crunch may be about to apply the handbrake to the Russian economy, but its paint industry continued to flourish in 2008, mirroring the expansion of wealth in the country, and suggesting the sector may buck the expected downturn in the coming 12 months.…

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IAEA RADIOTHERAPY SYLLABUS WRITTEN FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES



BY KEITH NUTHALL

A SYLLABUS for training radiation oncologists in developing countries has been written by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Available in 2009, the aim is to help educational centres in low-middle income countries run training programmes, because of a "critical shortage of trained radiotherapy staff in developing nations", said the IAEA.…

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STORM CLOUDS LOOM FOR AMERICA'S NUCLEAR INDUSTRY AS OBAMA PRESIDENCY LOOMS



BY SARAH BROWN

WHEN US President-elect Barack Obama takes office this January 20, the transition of power may halt plans for a nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain in Nevada and could impede the progress of new nuclear energy development across America.…

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KEY NEGOTIATORS RAISE PROSPECT OF DOHA DEAL BY CHRISTMAS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

AS world leaders gather in Washington for tomorrow’s key G20 meeting, key negotiators within the World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) Doha Development Round have suggested a deal could be struck by Christmas. The European Union (EU) and possibly the United States are expected pressure India, China and others to strike a Doha deal this year at the summit.…

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EU RECEIVED ANOTHER WTO SLAP OVER BANANA TRADE - COULD WEAKEN BRUSSELS IN DOHA TALKS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE WORLD Trade Organisation (WTO) has again censured the European Union (EU) for failing to comply with global trading rules on its long running banana dispute with the USA and Latin America. An appellate panel of the WTO disputes settlement body found the EU’s discriminatory regime favouring the import of Caribbean and African bananas over central and south American fruit does illegally harm American fruit companies: "it nullified or impaired benefits accruing to the United States" under the WTO’s general agreement on tariffs and trade (GATT).…

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INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATION ROUND-UP - BALTIC SEA STOCK CONSERVATION MEASURES APPROVED



BY KEITH NUTHALL

EUROPEAN Union (EU) ministers have formally approved reductions to total allowable catches (TACs) in the Baltic Sea, with the aim of conserving stocks. That said, ministers did not reduce catches to the levels preferred by the European Commission: western Baltic herring catches have been cut by 39%, while Brussels wanted a 63% reduction: the Commission was mollified by a commitment from ministers to establish a long-term management plan for this stock.…

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