Monthly Archives: December 2011

Brazil sues Chevron for $10.6bn oil spill damage

Brazilian federal prosecutors late on Wednesday sued US-based Chevron and rig operator Transocean for $10.6bn in damages following environmental harm alleged to have been caused by an oil leakage in early November. Prosecutors also asked the court to force the companies to shut down operations at the Frade field in Brazil until the case is…

Olympus meets earnings deadline to stay in TSE

Japanese optical equipment manufacturer Olympus has submitted long delayed earnings reports on Wednesday, only hours before a crucial deadline to avoid being removed from the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The TSE, the world’s second largest bourse, has now removed the company from its watch list for automatic ejection. However, Olympus continues to be at risk of…

German president criticises G20’s crisis approach

German President Christian Wulff criticised efforts by the Group of 20 nations to contain the global financial crisis, saying they were too small in scale and had achieved little. Last month’s summit of G20 leaders in France failed to bring progress which the world urgently needed, Wulff said, citing regulation of the financial sector and…

Pakistan flood pain lingers

The 2010 floods in Pakistan started late in July, following heavier than normal monsoon rains in Balochistan, the Punjab, Sindh, Pakhtunkhwa and the Khyber; in fact the whole Indus River Basin was affected. At one stage nearly 20 percent of Pakistan’s land area was covered with water, a total of some 307,374 square miles (796,095…

State entities in Dubai show $101.5bn debt

Moody’s Investors Service on Tuesday said Dubai and its state-owned non-financials have outstanding debt of $101.5bn and could require further financial support to meet their obligations. The credit rating agency’s report showed that it remains concerned about the emirate’s maturing debt in spite of the “significant process” made by the authorities and state-owned companies to…

Italian cabinet approves radical austerity measures

Italy’s new Prime Minister Mario Monti announced late on Sunday and ahead of a crucial EU summit on Thursday and Friday, that his cabinet has approved a €30bn package of austerity measures to help “reawaken” the Italian financial system. Europe’s third biggest economy is scheduled to present the plan to parliament today in a bid…