Search Results for: food⊂mit=Search
10 results out of 504 results found for 'food⊂mit=Search'.
INDIGENOUS DIETS KEEPING TRIBES HEALTHY - BUT FOODS DISAPPEARING
BY KEITH NUTHALL
CONSERVATIONISTS may detest the notion of jungle food – cooking rain forest species for the dinner table. But harvested sustainably, the plants, animals and birds of jungles, deserts, ice caps and steppes inhabited by traditional societies offer excellent nutrition.…
MOROCCAN PAINT SECTOR DODGES GLOBAL RECESSION BULLET
BY PAUL COCHRANE
MOROCCO’S 150,000 tonnes per year decorative paint market, worth Moroccan Dirham (MAD) 2 billion (GBPounds 157.4 million), grew by an estimated 5 to 8% in 2008, but plunged by 30% in December in the wake of the financial crisis, according to paint manufacturer Hempel Morocco (NOTE – SPELLING IS CORRECT).…
USA: Michigan University sells digital titles on Booksurge
By Emma Jackson
The University of Michigan’s library has partnered with Booksurge, the print-on-demand service owned by Internet retailer Amazon Inc., to make thousands of rare and out-of-print books available for one-off printing through digitisation.
Customers will be able to browse over 400,00 titles on Amazon.com,…
EUROPEAN COMMISSION TO PROBE GOOGLE LIBRARY PROJECT
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Commission is to launch an inquiry into the digitalisation of millions of books by Google, without the permission of their rights holders, to see whether the European Union (EU) should protect authors and publishers.
This follows a request made yesterday (28-3) by the EU Council of Ministers meeting in Brussels.…
HOW CHINA'S GOVERNMENT STIMULUS PACKAGE IS HELPING THE RECYCLED METALS IMPORT MARKET RECOVER
BY MARK GODFREY
BUSINESS remains slow in Jinghai, a slice of industrial land a couple of hours east of Beijing designated as one of China’s key recycling belts. Business was brisk here up to October 2008, the date given locally as the beginning of a savage dip in demand for recyclables.…
OIL TANKERS OFFERED ADDITIONAL SAFETY OFF WEST AFRICA BY SEARCH-AND-RESCUE DEAL
BY KEITH NUTHALL
OIL tankers sailing past the often unstable shores of west Africa will be safer in future, following the commissioning of a fully-equipped regional Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre in Monrovia, Liberia, coordinated by the International Maritime Organisation. The centre will help ships in distress off the Ivory Coast, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.…
SEVEN MACRO TRENDS IN THE TEXTILES AND APPAREL INDUSTRY 2008
BY LEE ADENDORFF
IF there was a year when long-term textile and clothing market forecasters missed by a mile, 2008 was it. Forecasts made in 2007 were dominated by looming concerns about trade restrictions, investment in technology, a potential slow-down of production and a consolidation of business investment but no one predicted what devastating effects an unexpected recession would have on the textiles and apparel sector.…
UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS POSING CHALLENGE FOR GLOBAL AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL SYSTEMS
BY PHILIPPA JONES
THE NUMBER of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) in the skies above Europe is increasing rapidly, but safety concerns mean they normally remain segregated from other airspace users, inhibiting their employment in a wide range of activities. Eurocontrol, the European organisation for the safety of air navigation, has therefore launched a major project of work intended to ensure the safe and efficient integration of UAS into the pan-European Air Traffic Management Network (ATM).…
EUROPEAN INITIATIVE SEEKS TO PRESERVE OBSOLETE DIGITAL WRITTEN WORKS
BY MARK ROWE
AS book reading online enters the mainstream, one question that has plagued academic and cultural journals for years has re-emerged: digital obsolescence. Publishers are concerned about keeping pace with technological advances and preserving access to digital material.
No sooner, and at significant expense, is literature scanned and digitally secured in a given format, than it risks being overtaken by the latest storage versions.…
ISO OFFERS NUCLEAR SECTOR GLOBAL STANDARDS TO SPREAD BEST PRACTICE
BY KEITH NUTHALL, EMMA JACKSON and ALAN OSBORN
THE NUCLEAR energy industry has always been a global business, and since the fall of communism, it has become more, not less international. As a result, the need for common standards and practices, relevant to the industry, its suppliers and its customers is becoming increasingly important.…