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Book (stand-alone)Technical bookSources of Non-wood Fibre for Paper, Board and Panels Production: Status, Trends and Prospects for India
Asia-Pacific Forestry Sector Outlook Study Working Paper No: APFSOS/WP/10
1997Also available in:
No results found.The increasing demand for pulp, paper and panel products and a shrinking forest resource base in India has recently led to the expanded exploitation of alternative fibre sources such as bagasse, straw and recycled material. This report captures these developments and makes an attempt to foresee the scenario to the year 2010. -
MeetingMeeting documentFuture Direction of Jute: Geo-Textile and Agro-Textile Techniques as Potential Avenues for Growth and Product Diversification in the Indian Jute Industry
Joint Meeting of the Thirty-ninth session of the Intergovernmental Group on Hard Fibres and the Forty-first session of the Intergovernmental Group on Jute, Kenaf and Allied Fibres. Tanga, United Republic of Tanzania, 15-17 November 2017
2017Also available in:
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Book (series)Technical reportFuture prospects for fish and fishery products. 4. Fish consumption in the European Union in 2015 and 2030. Part 2. Country projections [Available on the Web only] 2008
Also available in:
No results found.This report presents the major results by country for fish consumption (consumption per capita and apparent consumption), production (captures and aquaculture and commodities) and fish trade (exports and imports) estimations and projections for 28 countries in Europe from 1989 to 2030. The increasing demand of ready-to-eat products are projected for everywhere in Europe in 2030 but with a more marked trend in the western countries because of high purchasing power in the region. Changes in consumption are mainly changes in commodities rather than species: the same species will be consumed in 2030 but in a different form. Eastern European countries will progressively catch up and conform to the consumption pattern of the Western countries. The improvement of their economies and changing consumption habits will slowly allow Eastern countries to develop a demand-driven market rather than the current supply-driven one. But, behind the apparent standardisation of consumption, regional differences will still exist: a Spanish consumer will not have the same consumption pattern as a Swedish or a Romanian one. National preferences will be conditioned through the net supply of commodities that respect historical tastes and habits but also integrate modern living conditions.
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