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A selection of UK news briefs
The Pollution Prevention and Control Bill, which will provide a framework to implement the European Community's Integrated Pollution Prevention and Control (IPPC) Directive, was criticised by Lords at Committee Stage last month for delegating too much power to the Secretary of State in the absence of detail in the Act itself.
The world may be approaching the threshold of a sweeping change in the way we respond to environmental threats - a social threshold that, once crossed, could profoundly change our outlook, according to an article released yesterday by the Worldwatch Institute.
Officials from 138 countries suspended talks in Cartagena, Columbia, this week after ten days of talks failed to produce a legally binding protocol on reducing risks related to the transboundary movement of living modified organisms (LMOs).
A Vanderbilt University engineer is using laser technology to help develop a car engine with 30 percent greater fuel efficiency than current models but that also meets US emission standards.
Researchers at Michigan Technological University are developing ways to use aluminium industry wastes in the manufacture of concrete.
Just over 61% of Europeans would not buy produce that has been genetically modified, according to a new survey on European shopping habits.
The US EPA will soon begin a $400,000 pilot project in the Florida Everglades and Wisconsin to investigate how to reduce mercury air emissions that may contaminate lakes, rivers and other waterbodies nationwide.
The European Parliament's environment committee (EPEC) has put forward several exemptions to the European Commission's proposed end-of-life vehicles directive despite widespread approval of the measures from EU governments.
A report submitted by a European Parliament rapporteur has criticised the European Commission's proposed amendments to the 1988 large combustion plants directive for being too weak.
People living near Texas' Matagorda Bay may be accumulating high levels of PCBs through seafood, according to Texas A&M University research.
The development over the last 30 years of Europe’s “impressive arsenal” of legal instruments covering industrial chemicals, has not been reflected in growing public confidence in chemicals, says EU Environment Commissioner, Ritt Bjerregaard. “We're getting the message that the current Community legislation just isn't doing the job”.
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