Monday, September 2, 2013

Daily News: Reuters Science News Headlines - China sacks head of state asset regulator: Xinhua

Monday, Sep 02, 2013 07:21 PM PDT

China sacks head of state asset regulator: Xinhua 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 07:21 PM PDT
BEIJING (Reuters) - China has sacked the head of its state assets regulator, former top energy executive Jiang Jiemin, the official Xinhua news agency said on Tuesday, two days after the agency reported Jiang was the subject of a corruption probe. Jiang is "suspected of serious discipline violations", state media said on Sunday, shorthand the government generally uses to describe graft. (Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Jonathan Standing; Editing by Paul Tait)
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Japan to spend 40 billion yen to treat radioactive water at Fukushima: Nikkei 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 02:25 PM PDT
Japan's NRA Chairman Tanaka attends a news conference in Tokyo(Reuters) - The Japan government plans to spend at least 40 billion yen ($402.60 million) to contain the leaking of radioactive water at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the Nikkei newspaper said, citing government sources. The government is expected to announce on Tuesday a package of measures to deal with the crisis at the Tokyo Electric Power Co plant wrecked by an earthquake in 2011. The government intends to cover all the costs for freezing the soil around the reactors to prevent groundwater from mixing with contaminated water inside the reactor, the daily said. ...
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British cost watchdog recommends Thrombogenics eye drug 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 09:00 AM PDT
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Belgian biotech group Thrombogenics said on Monday that its main drug Jetrea, which treats eye disease, was recommended for reimbursement by British healthcare cost watchdog NICE. Jetrea, which treats vitreomacular adhesion, an ageing-related vision problem that can lead to blindness, was recommended for full reimbursement, also for those patients with early stage symptoms, Thrombogenics said. (Reporting by Robert-Jan Bartunek)
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Libya imports fuel to keep the power on 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 05:43 AM PDT
TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Libya has begun importing diesel and fuel oil to keep power plants operating after protests closed most of the gas fields in its eastern region which usually supply them, an industry executive said on Monday. No end is in sight to the worst disruption to Libya's oil industry since the civil war in 2011 as armed groups, security guards and oil workers with tribal loyalties shut down pipelines and oil ports across the country. ...
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Novartis heart failure drug effective across patient groups 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 05:00 AM PDT
By Ben Hirschler AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - An experimental drug from Novartis to treat heart failure proved equally effective regardless of the age of patients or whether they had other medical problems, clinical trial results presented on Monday showed. The drug, serelaxin, which is a form of a human hormone that relaxes blood vessels and eases stress on the heart and other organs, is viewed as an important medicine in the Swiss drugmaker's developmental pipeline. Analysts at Jefferies expect the drug to generate peak sales of $1.5 billion a year. ...
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Doctors get good and bad safety news on diabetes drugs 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 02:53 AM PDT
By Ben Hirschler AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Diabetes pills known as DPP-4 therapies got a mixed safety report on Monday as studies showed they did not raise the risk of heart attacks but might be linked to heart failure, where the heart fails to pump blood adequately. Reassuringly, the medicines were not associated with increased rates of either inflammation of the pancreas or cancer - something that has been a worry in the past. However, in the case of AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers Squibb's approved drug Onglyza, there was a small increase in hospitalizations for heart failure. ...
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Ivory Coast's SMB revamps refinery, eyes local market 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 02:44 AM PDT
ABIDJAN (Reuters) - Ivory Coast bitumen maker SMB produced 216,000 tonnes last year but will see output dip by more than 30 percent in 2013 owing to work on its refinery, its chairwoman said on Friday. Aminata Traore told Reuters that output should climb to 275,000 tonnes by 2015, with post-war reconstruction making Ivory Coast a growing market despite stiff competition from Asian and European producers. SMB is West Africa's sole producer of bitumen, which is used in road construction. Traore said Nigeria was its biggest single market, with Angola second. ...
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Japan vows quick action, public funds for Fukushima 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 01:22 AM PDT
Japan's NRA Chairman Tanaka attends a news conference in TokyoBy Sumio Ito and Mari Saito TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan vowed quick, decisive action, including the use of public funds, to tackle the worsening problem of contaminated water pouring from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant, as the authorities step in to help the facility's embattled operator. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the government "will step forward and implement all necessary policies" to deal with the flood of radioactive water from the plant, a legacy of the world's worst atomic disaster in a quarter century. ...
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OMV says gets stake in Madagascar offshore block 
Monday, Sep 02, 2013 12:13 AM PDT
(Blank Headline Received)VIENNA (Reuters) - Austrian oil and gas group OMV has agreed to buy a 40 percent stake in an offshore exploration block west of Madagascar, it said on Monday. OMV said the move would further its strategy of developing a balanced exploration and production portfolio, including opportunities in sub-Saharan Africa. The company did not disclose the price it was paying to buy the stake from Niko Resources. Niko will retain a 35 percent stake, and EnerMad owns the other 25 percent. OMV said it would take over as operator of the block before the start of drilling, which was expected in early 2015.
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Mexico Lower House approves final part of divisive education reform 
Sunday, Sep 01, 2013 09:57 PM PDT
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican lawmakers on Sunday approved the final part of a bill to reform an education sector that badly underperforms global peers, legislation that has prompted thousands of school staff to protest in the streets. The lower house approved so-called secondary laws that regulate the tests that President Enrique Pena Nieto says teachers should take periodically to ensure they are up to standard or lose their jobs should they flunk. ...
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Japan reiterates may consider discharging radiated Fukushima water into ocean 
Sunday, Sep 01, 2013 09:30 PM PDT
File photo of an aerial view of Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO)'s tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant and its contaminated water storage tanks in FukushimaTOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's nuclear regulator reiterated on Monday that it may have to consider discharging into the ocean water from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant that contains radiation below regulatory thresholds. Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) Chairman Shunichi Tanaka told reporters there was no evidence of new water leaks at Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant, following the discovery of high radiation levels in recent days. ...
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