Search Results for: united nations⊂mit=Search
10 results out of 4025 results found for 'united nations⊂mit=Search'.
NANOTECHNOLOGY INNOVATIONS OFFER ADVANCES FOR POWER GENERATION
BY MARK ROWE, in London
NANOTECHNOLOGY has a range of significant implications for power generation, a series of leading UK and world experts have told a high-level conference at Britain’s Royal Society. From solar cells to battery storage and fuel cells, nanotechnology will change the way we produce energy, with some impacts already beginning to be rolled out and others expected to become mainstream and commercially viable within 10 years.…
EU COUNTERFEIT FIGURES SHOW FAKES BOOM CONTINUES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE BOOM in counterfeit goods being smuggled into the European Union (EU) is continuing, according to the latest figures from the European Commission. It says EU customs officials seized more than 250 million fake items in 2006, compared with 75 million in 2005 and 100 million in 2004.…
SOUTHERN INDIA NURSE PROSPERS BY MOVING NORTH TO DELHI
BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA, in New Delhi
SHY but confident, Leenia Thomas, 31, is among the few fortunate nurses in India satisfied with their present employment and not dreaming of immigrating to the UK, USA or the Gulf. However she still lives 2,000 km away from her hometown in the southern state of Kerala, which provides a large proportion of the nurses in India because of its high literacy rates and unusually strong cultural position of women.…
CHINA CIGARETTE COUNTERFEITERS PROSPER, DESPITE GOVERNMENT CLAMPDOWNS
BY MARK GODFREY, in Beijing
CIGARETTE counterfeiters have borne the brunt of recent Chinese government efforts to curb the country’s rampant trade in fake goods. However, Beijing’s recent efforts to rationalise and modernise the country’s cigarette industry – by some measures, the world’s largest – have unwittingly aided the counterfeiters.…
ISO OFFERS POWER INDUSTRY GLOBAL BEST PRACTICE STANDARDS AND GUIDELINES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE POWER generation industry has always been a globalised business, especially regarding the manufacture of equipment, but with the opening of national electricity markets, especially in Europe, it has become increasingly international. As a result, the need for common standards and practices, relevant to the industry, its suppliers and its customers is becoming more and more important.…
EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT APPROVES EU LORRY TYPE APPROVAL SYSTEM
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE EUROPEAN Union’s (EU) harmonised type-approval system for vehicle design has been extended to cover lorries, vans, semi-trailers and trailers, with the European Parliament approving a directive negotiated in advance with the EU Council of Ministers. Mandatory design standards will be based on United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) models, creating one set of guidelines, whereas before national rules governed which commercial goods vehicles could be operate in the 27 EU member states.…
EU AND USA PLOT REGULATORY COOPERATION OVER COSMETICS SECTOR
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE UNITED States and the European Union (EU) will prioritise harmonising their regulations for the cosmetics sector over 2007 and 2008, a US-EU summit in Washington DC has agreed. During an annual meeting between the two economic giants, ministers and officials have agreed to focus on “reducing the need for animal tests by cooperating on alternative testing methods.”…
UNITED NATIONS MOVES TOWARDS ADOPTING INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC SECTOR ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THERE can be fewer larger accountancy jobs than a complete overhaul of the accounting systems of all United Nations organisations, but such a project is underway, and – some would say true to form – the UN is now splashing cash on external accounting consultants.…
CHINA CIGARETTE COUNTERFEITERS PROSPER, DESPITE GOVERNMENT CLAMPDOWNS
BY MARK GODFREY, in Beijing
CIGARETTE counterfeiters have borne the brunt of recent Chinese government efforts to curb the country’s rampant trade in fake goods. However, Beijing’s recent efforts to rationalise and modernise the country’s cigarette industry – by some measures, the world’s largest – have unwittingly aided the counterfeiters.…
MIDDLE EAST FEATURE - UAE BAHRAIN LEBANON SAUDI ARABIA
BY PAUL COCHRANE, in Beirut
SALES of cosmetics, perfumes and toiletries are surging in the Middle East, with sales reaching US$2.1 billion last year according to official statistics.
German cosmetics and toiletries manufacturing giant Beiersdorf estimated regional growth at 10% percent last year.…