CEO report indicates solid industry recovery

A poll of Australian chief executives shows growth in the country’s manufacturing, construction and services sectors is expected to be reasonably solid, but uneven in 2010.

The result is contained in the latest CEO survey, Industry in Recovery Mode in 2010, conducted by the Australian Industry Group and Deloitte.

An improvement was expected across all three industries, with particular strength in the services and manufacturing sectors.

The survey also found improving consumer confidence in incomes growth and employment prospects, as well as rising household wealth and exposure to strong growth in China, would drive growth this year.

But the fading effects of the Federal Government’s stimulus and the impact of higher interest rates were likely to hit the construction sector particularly hard.

On average, manufacturers were anticipating a 5.6 per cent increase in the nominal value of sales in 2010 to about $415 billion.

Sales in the services sector were set to rise 6.6 per cent and construction sales were forecast to grow by 2.5 per cent.

Employment in the manufacturing industry was expected to rise 2.9 per cent, service sector employment was due to increase by 2.3 per cent, and the construction sector was set for employment growth of just 0.5 per cent.

Those employers surveyed said the possible re-emergence of skills shortages was a real worry, as the economy returns to growth.

The chief executive of the Australian Industry Group, Heather Ridout says the economy looks set to consolidate this year, but the rebound won’t be as strong as those that occurred after previous downturns.

“Despite the stronger sales and employment expectations, investment trends across these sectors remain soft and conservative,” she said.

“The challenges for policy and for business will be to strengthen the recovery while addressing the ongoing requirement to build on the foundations of longer-term growth.”

The manufacturing partner for Deloitte, Damon Cantwell says 2010 would provide businesses with a range of opportunities to make up ground.

“While 2009 was characterised as a year founded on survival, 2010 offers real opportunities for growth,” he said.

EU supported urban agricultural market popular in Kerala

Maradu (Kerala), Sept 18 (ANI): Agricultural Urban Wholesale Market at Maradu in Kerala has become popular among residents and farmers alike.

Fresh and cheap agricultural products are available here and the farmers have the storing, testing and other facilities.

The market is run by the Kerala Government and is financially aided by the European Union (EU). Fresh fruits, vegetables, spice and other agriculture produces are sold in the market.

The place is attracting hordes of customers, as the prices of products are cheaper compared to other shops.

“Most of the products sold in this market are fresh and of a good quality. Earlier, I used to go to main market. But this place is cheap, easy and products come directly from the farms as compared to other shops,” said Sebastian, a customer.

The setting up of warehousing, packaging and marine testing units for frozen or dried fish, vegetables and fruits at the Urban Market are some of the facilities available to farmers.

Prices are low since the farmers directly supply their produce in this market and own shops.

“Compared to other markets here, the prices are low as we have no labour cost involved During festival and other occasions, sellers used to charge high but here prices always remain low because we ourselves produce and later sell and for customers,” said Saji Kumar, a farmer and a shop owner.

Recently, various programmes and exhibitions have been introduced with the help of the State Government and horticulture mission to make the market more farmer-friendly.

The market was set up to improve the marketing infrastructure and enabling farmers to get a better price for their produce.

The market is developed at an area of 46 acres that can handle more than 2,500 tons of produce.

Facilities such as internet access enable the farmers keep track of the daily prices, Agmark certification for the produce is also available at the Agmark Testing Laboratory functioning at the market. By Juhan Samuel (ANI)

Gene linked to male infertility identified

Washington, Sept 16 (ANI): Scientists from Virginia Commonwealth University have identified a gene that may contribute to male infertility.

The research team hopes that the new findings would lead to new approaches to male contraception.

Sperm are produced in the testicles through a three-step process called spermatogenesis.

During the final stage, known as spermiogenesis, a lot of changes take place, including the packaging of DNA into the sperm head and the formation of the sperm tail, which propels the sperm cell toward the egg.

The study conducted using mouse model showed that mice lacking a protein called meiosis expressed gene 1, or MEIG1, were sterile as a result of impaired spermiogenesis – the process that encompasses changes in the sperm head and the formation of the tail.

The team also found that MEIG1 associates with the Parkin co-regulated gene protein, or PACRG protein, and that testicular PACRG protein is reduced in MEIG1-deficient mice.

PACRG is thought to play a key role in assembly of the sperm tail, and the reproductive phenotype of PACRG -deficient mice mirrors that of the MEIG1-mutant mice.

“We discovered that MEIG1 is essential for male fertility. Moreover, our findings reveal a critical role for the MEIG1/PACRG partnership in the function of a structure that is unique to sperm, the manchette. The absence of a normal manchette in mice lacking MEIG1 totally disrupts the maturation process of sperm,” said Dr Jerome F. Strauss III, dean in the VCU School of Medicine.

“In addition to having an impact on fertility, the discovery identifies a new target for drug discovery for a much needed reversible male method of contraception,” he added.

The study is published in the Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

Flexible high-resolution home theatre displays come closer to reality

Washington, August 21 (ANI): You may soon get to enjoy facilities like flexible high-resolution home theatre displays, wearable health monitors, and biomedical imaging devices because scientists are working on a novel process for creating new classes of lighting and display systems.

John Rogers, the Flory-Founder Chair Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois, has revealed that the new process is all about creating and assembling ultrathin, ultrasmall inorganic light-emitting diodes (LEDs) into large arrays offers new classes of lighting and display systems with interesting properties, such as see-through construction and mechanical flexibility.

He said that such properties would be impossible to achieve with existing technologies.

“Our goal is to marry some of the advantages of inorganic LED technology with the scalability, ease of processing and resolution of organic LEDs,” said Rogers.

Compared to their organic counterparts, inorganic LEDs are brighter, more robust and longer-lived.

Organic LEDs, however, are attractive because they can be formed on flexible substrates, in dense, interconnected arrays.

Rogers and his colleagues-including collaborators from Northwestern University, the Institute of High Performance Computing in Singapore, and Tsinghua University in Beijing-say that the new technology combines features of both.

“By printing large arrays of ultrathin, ultrasmall inorganic LEDs and interconnecting them using thin-film processing, we can create general lighting and high-resolution display systems that otherwise could not be built with the conventional ways that inorganic LEDs are made, manipulated and assembled,” Rogers said.

To overcome requirements on device size and thickness associated with conventional wafer dicing, packaging and wire bonding methods, the researchers have developed epitaxial growth techniques for creating LEDs with sizes up to 100 times smaller than usual.

They have also developed printing processes for assembling these devices into arrays on stiff, flexible, and stretchable substrates.

To create an array, a rubber stamp contacts the wafer surface at selected points, lifts off the LEDs at those points, and transfers them to the desired substrate.

“The stamping process provides a much faster alternative to the standard robotic ‘pick and place’ process that manipulates inorganic LEDs one at a time. The new approach can lift large numbers of small, thin LEDs from the wafer in one step, and then print them onto a substrate in another step,” Rogers said.

The researcher says that shifting position and repeating the stamping process can transfer LEDs to other locations on the same substrate, and, in this fashion, large light panels and displays can be crafted from small LEDs made in dense arrays on a single, comparatively small wafer.

Given that the LEDs can be placed far apart and still provide sufficient light output, Rogers says that the panels and displays can be nearly transparent.

He even envisions the creation of flexible and even stretchable sheets of printed LEDs, which can have potential use in the health-care industry.

“Wrapping a stretchable sheet of tiny LEDs around the human body offers interesting opportunities in biomedicine and biotechnology, including applications in health monitoring, diagnostics and imaging,” Rogers said.

A research article describing the researchers’ work has been published in the journal Science. (ANI)

Oz woman helps launch an environment friendly campaign

Melbourne, May 20 (ANI): AN Australian businesswoman Natalie Isaacs was dazed to realize that how her own measures to conserve energy and our planet helped launch a campaign to protect our environment.

Natalie made her family adopt few measures at home to avoid wasting energy and was dazed to see the results.

“Until a few years ago it all seemed too hard. I wasn’t connected to the problem and then I took a closer look and found you can help by changing little things in your daily life,” the businesswoman and mother of four from Newport on Sydney’s Northern Beaches said yesterday,” The Daily Telegraph quoted Natalie, as saying.

“We did simple things. Turned off appliances at the power point, lights off if someone’s not in the room, the kids have two worms farms for organic waste. I use green bags. We try to use as little packaging as possible.We’ve cut our carbon emissions and saved money too – our last quarter power bill was down 12 per cent on the year before,” Natalie added.

Soon after she decided to show other women that how easy it is to conserve energy, by taking few important measures.

Thus she co-founded a campaign called 1 million women with conservationist Michelle Grosvenor, to tell other women that how they can contribute towards saving our planet.I think many are like me. I had my head completely buried in the sand,” Natalie said. But our website – http://www.1millionwomen.com.au – shows how you can cut carbon emissions daily,” Natalie added. (ANI)

Homeopathic remedy gets first ever licence nod from Brit medicines regulator

London, May 16 (ANI): An arnica product has become the homeopathic remedy to receive a first licence nod from the British medicines regulator under controversial new rules.

The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency has granted Nelsons Arnicare Arnica 30c pillules permission to make medicinal claims.

Manufacturers of homeopathic remedies were in the past prohibited from giving a therapeutic indication due to a lack of evidence questioning its effectiveness, reports the Times Online.

But under the new granted license, the packet of 84 pillules would bear the explanation: “A homeopathic medicinal product used within the homeopathic tradition for symptomatic relief of sprains, muscular aches and bruising or swelling after contusions.”

Robert Wilson, chairman of Nelsons, said that the inclusion of therapeutic indications on the packaging could “not only opens the practice of homeopathy up to new users but also gives it added credibility as a safe and natural complement to conventional medicine”.

But experts have cast a shadow of doubt over the decision, dubbing it a “cynical mockery of evidence-based medicine”.

Edzard Ernst, professor of complementary medicine at the Peninsula Medical School in Exeter, argued the arnica-based homeopathic product had zero active ingredients.

He said: “This is a huge rip-off and the label now makes false and misleading claims. There is no biological plausibility for this to work – it makes a cynical mockery of evidence-based medicine.

“Arnica is actually poisonous if you swallow it, so these pills contain essentially zero active ingredient.” (ANI)

Self-help groups enable women in Tripura to earn

Jirania (Tripura), May 9 (ANI): Women members elected to the village council in Tripura have taken a lead in paving the way for a large number of poor women to become self-reliant.

This has been made possible by these enterprising women representatives by setting up Self-Help Groups (SHGs), which generate allied productive vocations for the poor families.

In Jirania region of Tripura, several SHGs are in operation providing ample subsistence to the ‘have-not’ families.

Women who until the other day were just housewives doing domestic chores, are supplementing the family income through their own efforts.

“Our self help group consists of 11 women and right from making incense sticks and packaging to marketing is being done, all by women. Another 200 women work under us and have become self-employed and earn for their families by making incense sticks which are made out of raw natural materials available locally,” said Mithu Chakraborty, a member of SHG, Jirania, Tripura.

Although the Self-Help Groups exist only at the village level, the fact is that these women members of the village councils have played a stellar role in empowerment of women and also in poverty alleviation at the grass roots.

Apart from creating varied vocations, the Self-Help Groups have also been active in other spheres such as education, drinking water and community health programmes.

“We are running it very well. I believe because we know better what shall be more beneficial for the women folk like drinking water facility, literacy, health facility. We are keeping these as priority sectors and are developing with mutual help,” said Juhlera Khatun, a Panchayat member.

The Self-Help Groups have also been instrumental in the construction of link roads in the villages including building culverts across streams and other rivulets. (ANI)

Now, easy-to-use meat seasoning to do away with mess of traditional marinade

Washington, May 2 (ANI): Students from Virginia Tech University have developed an easy-to-use seasoning which adds flavour to meat without the mess of traditional marinade.

Made from all natural ingredients, ‘Spice N Easy’ seasoning does not need to be refrigerated and has a long shelf life. It has been created in Cajun and Italian flavours.

Nuggets of flavour, which are easily inserted into the meat, dissolve during cooking, releasing their flavour. Spice n Easy can be used to roast, grill, and slow-cook chicken, beef, fish, and pork.

The research team had to go through a number of challenges with their idea of a meat seasoning that would dissolve during cooking.

“The first problem was how to make a marinade inflexible enough to be inserted into meat,” said team leader Denise Gardner of Reading, Pa., an FST master’s degree candidate.

During the study, sucrose and water were heated, spices were added, and the product was cooled and shaped.

In addition to binding the spices, the sucrose adds sweetness and preserves spice quality.

The researchers also experimented with raw materials, different shapes and sizes, cooling times, mould components, and packaging to create the gourmet seasoning.

“We’ve tested the product in chicken, beef, and pork and found that it worked well in numerous applications,” said Kevin Holland of Bradford., Pa., a co-leader and FST doctoral candidate.

The students also conducted a product safety study and prepared a plan for commercial scale production and a marketing plan. (ANI)

Punjab’s honey train beats recession

Ludhiana, April 30 (ANI): Punjab is predominantly an agricultural state and offers various opportunities to agro-based industries.

The leader among honey producers in the country is Doraha-based Kashmir apiaries exports.

The Kashmir apiaries are sending consignments of processed honey to 15 countries.t is a major achievement by Kashmir Apiaries Exports, which is targeting 100 per cent growth in the current fiscal through export of honey to Europe and Africa.
It is already exporting processed honey to 45 countries and is confident about raising its turnover from 43.6 million dollars in last fiscal to 80 million dollars in 2009-10.

India’s exports have been affected by the economic downturn but the ‘honey train’ comes as a morale booster.

“It was our dream project to send a train, which carries honey from Punjab to Europe, America and the Middle East. About 90 containers of honey have been loaded in the train, which will be sent to around 15 countries across the world. So, we have named it the ‘Honey Train’ and given it a slogan ‘Honey Train Beats Recession’. At this time of recession, when India’s exports have dipped by 35 percent, we are planning to provide a new direction to India’s agriculture and horticulture by sending out the honey train,” said Shahzada Singh, Director of the Kashmir Apiaries Exports.

India produces a total of 70,000 tons of honey every year, of which 25,000 tons is exported the world over.

Punjab’s contribution to Honey export is 5,500 tons, of which 3,000 tons worth three million dollars are exported to the U.S., UK, Europe and West Asia.

And Punjab-based Kashmir Apiaries Exports has made a significant contribution to overseas sales. At present we have about 25,000 colonies and in the coming years we are planning to increase them to 100,000-200,000 to boost our production. We are also training beekeepers, so that they can produce better quality of honey. We have laboratories, where experts test honey before exporting it abroad. Europe’s specifications are very strict and we have to send honey, which meets those specifications and matches their quality parameters. We are supplying antibiotic free honey to them,” said Jagjit Singh, Managing Direcetor, Kashmir Apiaries Exports.

“According to me, there is huge potential in agro-based industries and I believe that we have only tapped one to two per cent. The industry has immense prospects. Till now, India has been exporting raw material but I think the time has come when we should start processing and packaging our products to sell it directly in global market. India offers good raw material, which it can export after processing and packaging,” said Shahzada Singh, Director of the Kashmir Apiaries Exports.

The company’s backbone comprises a nationwide network involving thousands of small honey producers.

It sells honey sells under four brand names and 140-odd private labels, placing it among the world’s top five honey processors.

Kashmir Apiaries has been able to boost its exports by importing technology to improve quality. And, it plans to export its products to 100 countries by 2010 and market high-value byproducts like royal jelly and bee venom. By Karan Kapoor (ANI)

Eco-friendly knickers are flying off British stores shelves

London, April 17 (ANI): Knickers, made from planet friendly fabrics, have been fast disappearing from the British shelves.

The idea of fair trade organic knickers came to Sarah Lucy Smith for her final project while studying the Eco Design course at Goldsmiths University.
She later joined forces with school friend Rose Cleary-Southwood and thus GreenKnickers came about.

And now the zero carbon pants are so popular that they have been flying off the shelves and a new wedding range is planned next in line.

“We started GreenKnickers to prove that ethical can be funny, beautiful and sexy. The fabrics are so gorgeous, and super-duper green,” Sky News quoted Sarah as saying.

“They’re selling extremely well. Some customers say they’re the comfiest knickers they’ve ever worn,” she added.

The global warming undergarments, made from fabrics such as organic cotton, hemp and silk, reaches in a box made from recycled paper.

A pair, costing up to 25 pounds, plus 3 pounds for postage and packaging, even changes its colour as it warms up due to thermo-chromic inks. (ANI)

New Soap, Old Bottle: Repackaging Name Brand Cleaners

Jonathan BardellineNew Soap, Old Bottle, a company created by designer, concept artist and inventor Scott Amron, looks like a page right out of Terracycle’s business plan.

The company sells hand soap, dish soap, glass and all-purpose cleaner, windshield wiper fluid and car wash concentrate in reused plastic and glass bottles. I’ll let the company speak for itself:

Each bottle is cleaned, sanitized and processed for reuse as packaging for your favorite brand of liquid soap.

Big companies aren’t going to do this on their own. So we’ll do it for them. We buy name brand liquid soap by the barrel and package it in old bottles here in America.

The site mentions products from a number of name brands – SoftSoap, Windex, 409, Dawn and Palmolive – and we’re waiting to hear back if the big companies are in on the project.

The cleaners mostly come in 20 ounce bottles, with prices ranging from $290 for refills in old beer bottles (right) to $4.60 for hand soap. In addition, it has “Super Green” versions of glass and all purpose cleaners that its says are its own “all natural blend.”

New Soap, Old Bottle also sells spray, pump and squeeze tops to encourage people to reuse their own used bottles, and the company is looking for old bottles to buy and reuse.

Dolly Parton finds Cracker Barrel a good fit

NASHVILLE (Billboard) – In a deal that seems as natural as biscuits and gravy, Dolly Parton and Cracker Barrel Old Country Store have partnered to release “Backwoods Barbie: The Collector’s Edition.”

The project not only propelled the veteran entertainer back into the top 10 of Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart but also became the first Cracker Barrel title to be tracked by Nielsen SoundScan.

“Our exclusive music program has grown to the point that participating in SoundScan just makes good sense,” says Cracker Barrel vice president of marketing Peter Keiser.

Released March 24, “Collector’s Edition” debuted at No. 9 on Top Country Albums and No. 40 on the Billboard 200, selling 12,000 copies its first week. Buoyed by Parton’s April 5 appearance on “60 Minutes” and a continued push by Cracker Barrel, the set sold 10,000 units the following week, charting at No. 14 on the country list. The album features three cuts exclusive to Cracker Barrel and new packaging.

“Backwoods Barbie” originally bowed last year on Parton’s Dolly Records. The title track will be featured in the Broadway musical “9 to 5,” for which Parton wrote the score. The musical’s formal premiere takes place April 30 at the Marquis Theater in New York.

“Me and Cracker Barrel have a lot in common: We’re both Tennessee-based and country people,” Parton said during a break from “9 to 5″ rehearsals. “I thought we’d make a perfect pairing, and evidently it’s working.”

In addition to the CD, Cracker Barrel is selling a limited-edition pink rocking chair and collector’s edition photo album. “We’re proud of that chair,” Parton says with a laugh. “We figured they needed a pink one out there. And the picture book is doing great. People like to follow their favorite artists and see what they’ve done through the years.”

Cracker Barrel has partnered with Kenny Rogers, Amy Grant and other artists on CDs, but the Parton partnership is the first to include merchandise.

“Only 1,350 rockers were made, and we sold approximately 70 percent in the first two weeks,” Keiser says. “The collector’s edition photo album has sold more the first week than any book we’ve sold at Cracker Barrel.”

(Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)

Environmental concern helps West Bengal’s jute industry thrive

Kolkata, April 9 (ANI): World environmental concerns have come as a bonus for the ailing jute industry in West Bengal.

The eco-friendly ‘golden fibre’ is finally finding its place in the limelight with the growing popularity of diversified jute goods.

Earlier, jute was just associated with the ugly sacks used for packaging, mainly in the sugar and cement industries. But with diversification into designer bags, wall-hangings, jute paintings, shoes, textiles even jewelry now, jute is rapidly emerging as a reusable alternative for the environment conscious citizens.

With several states banning use of polythene bags as a measure to protect the environment, jute has got a new lease of life in the carrier segment alone in the form of clutch bags, party bags, laundry bags, rucksacks, gunny bags, totes, shopping bags and wine bags.

Besides, a variety of exquisitely designed, painstakingly created handicraft and utility items are on display at various shops selling jute goods. Upscale stores like FabIndia and Anokhi are also stocking jute items of various hues nowadays.

“The industry has bright prospects. Earlier, we used to export only sacks to the tune of Rs.800 – 900 crore annually but in the last five to 10 years, the export volume has risen to Rs 1200 crore. The export share of diversified products has risen from 18 to 36 per cent in the last five years”, says Atri Bhattacharya, Secretary of the Jute Manufactures Development Corporation.

India is the world’s largest jute producer, accounting for 2/3rds of the world’s jute production. India exports to the US, Europe and Gulf countries.

India has launched the Jute Technology Mission and the next two years will be significant. If jute products are marketed ably at home and abroad, the Indian jute industry has the potential to double the current turnover of Rs. 5,000 crore, adds Bhattacharya, also the Executive Director, National Centre for Jute Diversification.

The bulk of the jute production in the country comes from West Bengal, Bihar, Assam, Orissa, Andhra Pradesh and Tripura.

Jute goods customers like Subhankar Chatterjee point out that the bio -degradable jute was the best alternative when polythene, plastic and other non-degradable products were choking the global environment.

Consciously buying jute goods is also a great way to support the workers and families involved in this indigenous industry, he adds.

The jute and allied industries have over 2.5 lakh workers and over four and half million people are involved in the jute trade in some manner or the other in India. India has been averaging a production of 1.6 million tones of per annum in the last five years with a domestic market of 1.4 million tonnes.

There was a time, when the jute industry thrived in West Bengal. Jute mills lined the banks of the river Hooghly, providing employment to thousands of people.

Militant Left trade unionism in the state ruined the industry. Of the 63 mills in the state, one closed down 11 years ago and another five years ago. The rest have been operational only intermittently, as per demand.

The operations are being carried out often at half or even one-fourth capacity. With growing awareness for environmental and interest in diversified jute goods, it may be hoped that the golden days of the ‘golden fibre’ would return soon. By Ajitha Menon (ANI)

Twelve factory workers killed in blast in Philippines

Manila – Twelve factory workers were killed and five injured when a boiler at a Styrofoam packaging plant exploded in the Philippines, police said Wednesday.

The explosion occurred Tuesday evening as night shift employees worked at the factory in Santa Maria town in Bulacan province, just north of Manila.

The town’s police chief, Superintendent Marcos Rivero, said five workers died on the spot while others were trapped under concrete and steel debris as the blast destroyed the factory.

“The explosion was very powerful,” he said. “Some of the fatalities were buried in rubble while others expired while undergoing treatment in nearby hospitals.”

Rivero said rescuers were still checking if there were still workers trapped in the debris.

He said an initial investigation showed the boiler overheated, causing it to explode. Investigators have so far not found evidence of sabotage. (dpa)

Piramal Healthcare to shut down one UK unit

Piramal Healthcare Ltd plans to shut one of its drug units in the UK to help control costs, booking a one-time hit of 710 million rupees in the quarter ended March, company officials said on Wednesday.

“We realised that within our system we could shift whatever … we are manufacturing at Huddersfield to other locations and thereby save a considerable amount of cost,” Chairman Ajay Piramal said on an investors call.

The unit in Huddersfield had revenue of 19 million pounds in the fiscal FY09, R. Ananthanarayanan, director, pharma solutions, said on the call.

Production will be shifted to other Piramal units in UK and India, Ananthanarayanan added. Piramal will have to run validation processes in these before the products can be manufactured there, delaying the revenue flow, he added.

This, coupled with high inventory build-up at several of Piramal’s clients, will see FY10 revenue from pharma solutions coming in 5 percent lower from a year earlier, he added.

Operating margins, however, is expected to improve by 6-8 percent due to a combination of the shutdown and a focus on high margin businesses including clinical packaging, and early phase manufacturing, he added.

With more business being moved to its Indian units, he sees revenue from the India-based custom manufacturing business growing 15 percent.

Piramal will continue to operate its two other drug-making units in the UK, including the one acquired from Pfizer in 2006. At the time of purchase, Piramal also secured contracts to make various products for Pfizer.

The U.S. drug giant has renewed about 25 percent of these contracts, with the rest under finalisation, he said.

Why some people prefer local items to global brands

Washington, Apr 1 (ANI): Not everybody prefers Coke or Pepsi, for there are people who love their local beverages far better than these global brands. And now, scientists have delved into the consumers’ psyche to know the reason behind this tendency.

A new study has examined why some consumers prefer local products and others gravitate toward global brands.

“Due to rapid globalization, local products-products with specifications and packaging tailored for local markets, such as Mecca Cola (France) and Fei-Chang Cola (China)-and global products (products with the same specifications and packaging for consumers from around the world) such as Pepsi and Coke, routinely compete against each other,” wrote authors Yinlong Zhang (University of Texas at San Antonio) and Adwait Khare (Quinnipiac University).

For the study, the researchers set out to answer the following question: “Why do global products fare better than local products in some markets and local products better than global products in other markets?”

In one experiment, they demonstrated that most consumers have intrinsic mindsets that point them toward global or local sensibilities.

“Global-minded consumers prefer global products (similar specifications for consumers around the world) and local-minded consumers prefer local products (different specifications for consumers from different parts of the world)” explained the authors.

The inclination toward global or local mindsets is connected to people’s desire for distinctiveness (local) versus their desire to be similar to others (global).

They conducted three subsequent studies, in which they enhanced the accessibility of participants’ local or global identities to investigate their responses to products.

They then manipulated consumers’ preferences by informing participants of the unsuitability of their global or local inclinations.

“A reversal in preference occurs when global-minded consumers’ desire for distinctiveness from others is enhanced and when local-minded consumers’ desire for solidarity with others is enhanced,” wrote the authors.

The study can help understand why people may gravitate toward one brand or another.

“The findings reveal how multinational or local firms can solidify consumers’ preferences for global or local products if their consumers’ global or local inclinations are compatible with their products’ positioning,” concluded the authors.

The study has been published in the Journal of Consumer Research. (ANI)

Is your bottled mineral water ‘clean’?

Washington, March 27 (ANI): Those who think mineral water is “clean” better think again, for a study in Germany has suggested that plastic mineral water bottles contaminate drinking water with estrogenic chemicals.

Martin Wagner and Jorg Oehlmann, from the Department of Aquatic Ecotoxicology at the Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main, analysed commercially available mineral waters, and found evidence of estrogenic compounds leaching out of the plastic packaging into the water.

The researchers say that these chemicals are potent in vivo and result in an increased development of embryos in the New Zealand mud snail.

This is the first time that any research team have shown that substances leaching out of plastic food packaging materials act as functional estrogens.

Wagner and Oehlmann looked at whether the migration of substances from packaging material into foodstuffs could contribute to human exposure to man-made hormones.

The researchers analysed 20 brands of mineral water available in Germany – nine bottled in glass, nine bottled in plastic, and two bottled in composite packaging (paperboard boxes coated with an inner plastic film).

Water samples were taken from the bottles, and tested for the presence of estrogenic chemicals in vitro.

The study group later conducted a reproduction test with the New Zealand mud snail to determine the source and potency of the xenoestrogens.

Wagner and Oehlmann say that they found estrogen contamination in 60 per cent of the samples they had analysed.

According to the researchers, mineral waters in glass bottles were less estrogenic than waters in plastic bottles.

They said that 33 per cent of all mineral waters bottled in glass compared with 78 per cent of waters in plastic bottles, and both waters bottled in composite packaging, showed significant hormonal activity.

When the researcher bred the New Zealand mud snail in both plastic and glass water bottles, they observed more than double the number of embryos in plastic bottles compared with glass bottles.

Together, said the team, the findings showed widespread contamination of mineral water with potent man-made estrogens that partly originate from compounds leaching out of the plastic packaging material.

The authors concluded: “We must have identified just the tip of the iceberg in that plastic packaging may be a major source of xenohormone contamination of many other edibles. Our findings provide an insight into the potential exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals due to unexpected sources of contamination.”

The study has been published in Springer’s journal Environmental Science and Pollution Research. (ANI)

Biggest New Zealand retailer to charge for plastic bags – 10 New Zealand cents (about 5 US cents)

Wellington – New Zealand’s biggest retail variety chain, The Warehouse, will start charging 10 New Zealand cents (about 5 US cents) for plastic shopping bags next month to protect the environment, according to news reports Wednesday.

The company, which has 128 variety and discount stationery stores, says it wants to take 20 million bags out of circulation in the next year.

The Warehouse, which is New Zealand’s biggest footwear and music retailer, said that surveys at four trial stores revealed that 85 per cent of customers would not use plastic bags if they had to pay for them.

The stores will sell reusable shopping bags for 1 New Zealand dollar.

New Zealand has reduced the use of plastic bags by about 100 million a year since a number of retail chains signed a packaging accord to discourage them in 2004, the New Zealand Herald reported. (dpa)

Macca revamping late wife’s food range

London, Feb 27 (ANI): Sir Paul McCartney is updating the vegetarian food range of his late wife Linda.

Frozen dishes by the late Lady McCartney’s became popular in the early Nineties and Sir Paul and daughter Mary have been involved in the re-branding of the products.

The new packaging features photography by Mary. Also, the great singer came up with the new tagline for the range, Food To Come Home To.

“Marketing experts felt Linda’s food needed revamping and Paul was obviously keen to help out,” The Daily Express quoted a source, as saying.

“Paul knows how proud Linda was of the food range and reckons she’d have been pleased with the new image,” the source added.

McCartney married American photographer Linda Eastman in 1969 and remained together until her death from breast cancer in 1998. (ANI)

Octomom offered $1m to have sex with eight different men in porn video

Washington, Feb 27 (ANI): Mega-adult conglomerate Vivid Entertainment wants Nadya Suleman, the California woman who made history after giving birth to octuplets on January 26, to have sex in eight different scenes with eight different men.

Yesterday it was being reported that the company had offered 1 million dollars to Suleman to star in a pornographic video.

Vivid’s CEO Stephen Hirsch had said that the company would release the film under their “Vivid-Celeb imprint, which has released titles starring such personalities as Pamela Anderson, Kim Kardashian, and most recently, former Miss USA Kelli MCarty.”

Now, the details of what they want Octomom to do have been revealed.

“The number eight is obviously heavily associated with her so we would like to work with that,” Fox News quoted Hirsch, as telling Tarts.

“But we would really love just to sit down and talk with her and come up with something she feels comfortable with. We want her to be involved with the whole thing from the plot line to the packaging,” he added.

Hirsch says Suleman has received their offer and is considering it.

“She’s struggling financially and this is a woman who wants to provide for her kids. This way she can hold her head high and not be using taxpayers money to support her family,” he added.

However, Suleman has blasted the reports.

“Those guys at Vivid video must be nuts!” she told Radaronline.com.

“Who wants to see me naked? Maybe in a year when the baby fat goes away,” she added. (ANI)