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Article - Le Parlement souhaite interdire le clonage des animaux de ferme - Commission de l'agriculture et du développement rural - Commission de l'environnement, de la santé publique et de la sécurit

Le Parlement veut interdire le clonage d'animaux à des fins agricoles en Europe. Un projet législatif approuvé par les commissions de l'environnement et de l'agriculture en juin sera soumis à un débat puis à un vote en plénière le 8 septembre. Les rapporteurs soutiennent l'interdiction du clonage à des fins d'élevage et d'approvisionnement alimentaire et souhaitent ajouter des dispositions sur les descendants d'animaux clonés et la commercialisation de ces produits. Suivez le débat à 9 heures.
Commission de l'agriculture et du développement rural
Commission de l'environnement, de la santé publique et de la sécurité alimentaire

Source : © Union européenne, 2015 - PE
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Training on Fisheries and Aquaculture Emergency Response Guidance held in the Philippines

Participants in this training seminar are all involved in post-Haiyan rehabilitation programmes in the Calamianes Region, where coastal fishing communities were severely devastated by Typhoon Haiyan in November 2013.

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Communiqué de presse - Les députés s'opposent aux interdictions d'importations d'aliments OGM - Commission de l'environnement, de la santé publique et de la sécurité alimentaire - Commission de l'agri

La commission de l'agriculture a rejeté, ce jeudi, le projet législatif de la Commission européenne qui donnerait aux États membres le pouvoir de restreindre ou d'interdire l'utilisation de denrées alimentaires et d'aliments pour animaux comportant des OGM et approuvés par l'UE.
Commission de l'environnement, de la santé publique et de la sécurité alimentaire
Commission de l'agriculture et du développement rural

Source : © Union européenne, 2015 - PE
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FAO-backed research ship investigates the occurrence of trash in the southern Indian Ocean

The Dr Fridtjof Nansen is plying the waves of the southern Indian Ocean, trawling for trash. Every time the ship's scientific crew threw down special nets, they hauled in pieces of plastics, underscoring the risk of dramatic upheavals in marine ecosystems even in one of the world's least-known and least-visited environments.

An estimated 5 trillion pieces of plastic currently float in the world's oceans, up from none in 1950 and posing a question about their potential impact on a food supply chain that stretches from plankton - which have been filmed eating plastic pellets - up through shellfish, salmon, tuna and eventually humans, not to mention whales.

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Momentum gathers for international agreement to combat rogue fishing

A growing number of countries are ratifying an international agreement to combat illegal fishing, fueling interest in how best to implement the instrument. Illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing is estimated to strip between $10 billion and $23 billion from the global economy, and their impacts undermine the way fish stocks are managed to make it a double concern around the world.

To help tackle the problem, FAO brokered the adoption in 2009 by its Member countries of the Agreement on Port State Measures to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing.

The agreement comes into force when 25 countries have deposited their instrument of ratification, known as acceptance of accession; so far, 12 countries have done so, the latest being Iceland in June. Two more states will soon join them.

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