News
Tweet
EU legislators hammer out deal on illegal timber
The EU is set to ban illegal timber from entering the European market following an agreement struck by European Parliament and member state negotiators on Wednesday. Member states, who had previously rejected such a ban, gave in to MEPs' demand.
The full text of this article is only available to registered subscribers and free trialists. To login, please enter your email address and subscriber access code below.
Article Index:
Related Content
-
EU set for standardised electric vehicle charger
25 Jun 2010
-
Belgian EU presidency aims for Eurovignette deal
25 Jun 2010
-
European retailers adopt green code of conduct
24 Jun 2010
-
MEPs want 85% WEEE collection target by 2016
23 Jun 2010
-
MEPs demand EU authorisations for all biocides
22 Jun 2010
-
EU laws on buildings, energy labelling published
21 Jun 2010
-
Parliament demands EU ecolabel for farmed fish
18 Jun 2010
-
Swedish FSC scheme accused of greenwashing
17 Jun 2010
-
Europe risks shortage of 14 critical raw materials
17 Jun 2010
-
Draft ETS benchmarks slipping beyond the summer
14 Jun 2010
Danish presidency programme
Denmark took over the presidency of the EU on 1 January.
Read ENDS article on its provisional agenda of meetings
See also its website and full programme of work officially presented on 6 January
RSS
Latest jobs
- Fusion People: Building Services Manager £58240-76960 per hour
- Evergreen Resources: Project Environmental Engineer Competitive
- Evergreen Resources: Assistant Mechanical Engineer £22000-29000 per annum

