Moscow and Oslo signed an agreement on their maritime border in the energy-rich Barents Sea, ending a dispute that has dragged on for decades. The disputed territory covered 175,000 square km (67,600 sq miles), an area about half the size of Germany, mainly in the Barents Sea between proven petroleum reserves on the Russian and Norwegian sides.
Canada, Russia, Norway, the United States and Denmark — the only nations with Arctic coastlines — are racing to file territorial claims over oil, gas and precious metal reserves that could become more accessible as the Arctic ice cap shrinks. International law states that the five have a 320 km (200 mile) economic zone north of their borders, but Moscow is claiming a larger slice based on its contention that the seabed under the Arctic is a continuation of its continental shelf. “Our sector in the Arctic is estimated to contain up to 100 billions tons of resources,” Natural Resources Minister Yuri Trutnev said.
Russia and Norway have already begun tapping mineral riches buried beneath the Barents Sea. Norwegian oil company Statoil brought its Snoehvit natural gas field on line in 2007. Meanwhile, Russia’s Gazprom, in conjunction with Statoil and France’s Total, is developing the Shtokman gas field.
The deal is expected to boost energy cooperation between the two countries, as it paves the way for the lifting of a 30-year-long moratorium on oil and gas extraction in the disputed zone. “Undoubtedly, this treaty will make a substantial contribution to strengthening the legal regime in the Arctic, based on the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, and to supporting the atmosphere of peace and cooperation there,” a source in the Russian presidential administration said.
Norway has urged Canada to negotiate and settle their disputes with Russia to decrease existing tensions over sovereignty in the Far North.
Article – The Guardian (UK) September 15th, 2010.
The European Commission on Monday’s revised its growth forecast for EU economy in 2010. According to the new data, GDP for the 16-nation euro area this year should jump 1.7%, compared to its previous forecast of 0.9%, thanks to increases of 3.4% in Germany and Poland, 1.9% in the Netherlands, 1.7% in Britain, 1.6% in France, and 1.1% in Italy.
Poland – manufacturing sector leads the recovery
Economic activity continued to be strong in the second quarter of 2010, with GDP growth reaching 1.1% q-o-q. The upswing was driven by a strong manufacturing sector (industrial production (s.a.) grew by 10.5% y-o-y in the second quarter of 2010) and a sharp rebound in world trade that brought Polish exports to their pre-crisis levels. Moreover, domestic demand increased on the back of rebuilding inventories and accelerating private consumption, fuelled by improving confidence as the recovery becomes firmer, and the overall resilience of the labour market. However, private investment continued to suffer from uncertainties regarding the global recovery and low capacity utilisation levels. In 2010 real GDP growth is expected to accelerate to 3.4%, ¾ pp. higher than expected in the Commission’s spring forecast. This follows from the better-than-expected result in the first half of 2010.
Quarterly real GDP growth is projected to slow somewhat in the third quarter of 2010 and remain stable in the final quarter of the year. The recovery is likely to be mild in the second half of the year, as the impetus from stock-building is likely to peter out and employment growth will remain sluggish towards the end of 2010. Although part of the labour-market adjustment was achieved through real wages, labour hoarding during the slowdown will imply less employment-rich growth and some re-adjustment of wages in the years to come. Stagnating employment and real wages will weigh on real disposable income and, combined with necessary fiscal consolidation, limit the potential for a strong rebound of domestic consumption.
Investment growth will mainly reflect robust public spending in capital expenditure, while tight financing conditions and excess capacity in certain sectors will hamper growth in private investment. The annual HICP inflation rate reached 2.5% in the second quarter of 2010, a notch higher than in the spring forecast. It is expected to remain below the central bank’s inflation target of 2.5% within the forecast horizon, reflecting the remaining slack in the economy.
Document – EU
Corruption, poor justice, and organized crime are still a big problem in Bulgaria and Romania. Since their joining to the EU in January 2007 little progress has been achieved in these fields. The lack of trust in the Bulgarian and Romanian judiciaries and police may now trigger the sanction of postponing their planned integration into the European border-free zone dubbed the “Schengen area.”
At this point two questions should be answered by Brussels officials and some EU leaders:
1. What was the real reason for Bulgaria and Romania’s adhesion to the EU in 2007? 2. Wasn’t it perhaps better to wait until the two countries resolve their internal problems and actually meet the European standards?
Article – BBC Europe – September 2010
Summary by RUVR
Official speech writing and video. US Department of State. September 8th, 2010.
The base was opened in December 2001 to support U.S. military operations in the ongoing war in Afghanistan. It has hosted forces from several other International Security Assistance Force member states as well. The base is a transit point for US military personnel coming and going from Afghanistan.
Transit Center at Manas (formerly Manas Air Base and unofficially Ganci Air Base) is its official name. It is located at Manas International Airport, near Bishkek, primarily operated by the U.S. Air Force.
In February 2009 the Kyrgyz Parliament voted to close the base after the two governments failed to agree on a higher rent for the property. American and Kyrgyz officials continued negotiations after the announcement, and on 23 June a tentative agreement was reached. Under the new arrangement the United States will pay $60 million for continued use of the facilities, three times the previous rent.
Article – RFERL – September 2010.
President Bronislaw Komorowski has been in Paris and Berlin this week for talks with President Nicholas Sarkozy and Chancellor Angela Merkel. On his first trip abroad as President of Poland since being elected in July, Komorowski has said that reinvigorating the Weimar Triangle – a diplomatic agreement signed by Poland, Germany and France in 1991 – is one of his key objectives.
Regular meetings of leaders and ministers from these countries, which had been held from the 1990s, stalled during the presidency of Komorowski’s late predecessor Lech Kaczynski.
Next year the EU‘s 27 countries will launch negotiations on the shape of the 2014-2021 budget. Many politicians are calling for austerity following the global economic crisis, which has emptied government coffers and increased national debts. “We expect the cohesion fund to be maintained,” Komorowski said, referring to the main EU aid fund. “It is so important to make solidarity real, to make development levels more equal,” he added in a news conference.
Poland is to receive some 67 billion euros in regional aid from the bloc’s long-term budget for 2007-2013. Other former communist countries from central Europe also benefit substantially from EU funds.
Some experts believe that the bloc’s budget will remain at least at the current level of around 1 percent of the Union’s economic output. The budget talks will also concern the future of the EU’s farm subsidies, which account for more than 40 percent of the expenditure. A special Parliament committee met in July.
In Berlin President Komorowski visited the Sachsenhausen concentration camp memorial near the capital, together with German President Christian Wulff, to pay respects to a war hero. He then explained that this is “a way to demonstrate our shared view of our terrible past.”
Napoleon was widely appreciated in Poland. Erecting monuments to the Emperor was not accepted by the three occupants of the Slavic country. After restoring independence in 1918 the hundredth anniversary of his death was celebrated in Poland nearly as it was in France.
Warsaw City Council has just given the go-ahead for the construction of a monument at the site of an old statue on Plac Powstańców Warszawy, which used to be known as Napoleon Square before World War Two
Article – Radio Polska; Napoleon’s Monuments in Poland – History.
The Auschwitz memorial in Poland says it has obtained around 150 medical instruments believed to have been used by the Nazis in experiments on the death camp inmates.
Article – AFP – Sydney Morning Herald August 28th, 2010.
The Northeast passage is tens of thousands of kilometres shorter than existing routes, stretching 13,000 kilometres along Russian shores to Asia compared to the 22,000-kilometres passage via the Suez Canal. “The aim of the voyage is to determine the feasibility of delivering energy on a regular, economically viable and safe basis along the Northern Sea Route from the Barents and Kara Seas to the markets of Southeast Asia,” Sovcomflot said in a statement.
Article – AFP
Newsweek magazine compiled a list of the 100 best countries in the world to live in according to 5 categories: health, economic dynamism, education, political environment and quality of life. Top 3 include Finland, Switzerland and Sweden.
Estonia ranks 32nd, Lithuania 34th and Latvia 36th. Ukraine takes the 49th place having outrun Russia 51st and Belarus 56th.
Burkina Faso, Nigeria and Cameroon are recognized to be the world worst countries.
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