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INTERNATIONAL CONFECTIONERY NEWS ROUND-UP - EFSA COMPLETES HEALTH CLAIM ASSESSMENTS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Food Safety Authority (EFSA) is staging a re-evaluation of the sweetener aspartame after it agreed to bring forward from 2020 a scheduled inquiry, despite recent scientific assessments failing to reveal fresh concerns about the sweetener.

Indeed, EFSA reviewed the latest studies on aspartame only in April, but accepted a European Commission request for a new study.…

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SAUDI ARABIA LOOKS WORLDWIDE FOR NUCLEAR COLLABORATORS



BY PAUL COCHRANE

SAUDI Arabia’s failure to secure a wide-ranging atomic energy treaty with the USA, continues to push the oil-rich country into the arms of other nuclear suiters, experts on the kingdom have told World Nuclear News. The Saudis plan is to invest USD112 billion over the next 20 years to build 16 nuclear power plants (NPPs) to offset rising domestic energy demand and retain its position as a leading hydrocarbons exporter.…

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CANADA'S 75-YEAR OLD WHEAT MONOPOLY FACES ITS END



BY MJ DESCHAMPS

THE CANADIAN federal government is planning to scrap the legal monopoly operated by Canadian Wheat Board (CWB) for grains grown in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and parts of British Columbia. The legal requirement that farmers in this area sell wheat and barley to the CWB would disappear on August 1, 2012.…

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BENGHAZI NURSES HEAL BATTLE WOUNDS OF LIBYAN REBELS



BY SERAJ ELALEM and JOSH MULL

ON February 17 as Libya’s revolt against the regime of Col Muamar Gaddafi began, Judith San Pedro, 52, reported to work as head nurse in the intensive care unit of Al-Jala Hospital in Benghazi, Libya.…

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COULD HEAVY METAL THORIUM FUEL CARS IN THE FUTURE?



BY KEITH NUTHALL

LITTLE more excites the international auto industry more than the search for an alternative to fossil fuels, and an American company is now looking seriously into the idea of using a heavy element thorium to generate locomotive power.…

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AVIATION SECTOR THINKS OUT OF THE BOX TO REDUCE FUEL EMISSIONS



BY MARK ROWE

IN the global push to make transport greener, the aviation industry is just beginning to take a serious look at how to ease the sector into using less fossil fuel. Scandinavian Airlines (SAS), like many other airlines, is currently looking into projects that scrutinise kerosene biofuel blends in the quest to make transportation more environmentally friendly.…

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EMA RESPONDS TO CRITICS OVER CLINICAL TRIAL RESULTS TRANSPARENCY



BY KEITH NUTHALL

THE EUROPEAN Medicines Agency (EMA) will allow public access to its databases with information on the potential side effects of medicines. Its announcement follows criticism that EMA has been too secretive with such data. In a communiqué, the agency said it would henceforth produce monthly reports summarising information held in its EudraVigilance database for all medicines with central EMA authorisation.…

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GLOOMY OUTLOOK FOR FREE TRADERS IN KNITTING SECTOR - BUT EU ORIGIN LABEL PLANS DROPPED



BY KEITH NUTHALL and DAVE YIN

THIS has been the year where the European Union (EU) considered imposing a draconian origin labelling law that would have been a major headache for knitwear manufacturers and retailers. In the winter, the European Parliament was seriously discussing insisting on a regulation forcing knitwear and crocheted clothes and accessories imports into the EU to carry country of origin labels.…

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NEW DIGITAL MARKETPLACE SOLUTION GIVES CSG's A FIGHTING CHANCE AGAINST THIRD PARTY CONTENT PLAYERS



BY KEITH NUTHALL

AS the global digital content marketplace continues to evolve rapidly, communications service providers (CSPs) have been increasingly losing revenue to third party content providers. For years now, entertainment and broadcasting companies, search engines and more have been harming CSP’s revenue streams and brand value.…

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ITALIAN USURY OFFERS ORGANISED CRIME AMPLE LAUNDERING OPPORTUNITIES



BY LEE ADENDORFF

EARLIER this year the search of the house of a notorious octogenarian loan shark in Naples made headlines in Italy. The news was given particular attention not because of the elderly gentleman’s reputation as one of the city’s most prominent usurers, but because of the amount of money investigators found hidden in his home: over Euro EUR5 million (US dollars USD7.15 million) in cash stashed behind tiles and false walls together with hundreds of thousands of Euros in debtor cheques.…

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