• Fertilizer injectors are devices used to apply water-soluble fertilizers, pesticides, plant growth regulators, wetting agents and mineral acids during crop production. (uga.edu)
  • Regulations subsequently put in place were intended to address public health risks associated with storm water runoff which had been shown to contain high levels of sediments and other pollutants such as phosphorus and nitrogen from fertilizers, pesticides, petroleum products, and construction chemicals that "can be toxic to aquatic organisms and degrade water for drinking and water-contact recreation. (findlaw.com)
  • Pesticides Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. (ontario.ca)
  • ters in Pakistan are being contaminated by raw sewage irrigation and land disposal of industrial effluents, and through the use of Water quality deep soakage pits and heavy application of In Pakistan, drinking-water supplies are fertilizers and pesticides. (who.int)
  • Firstly, unlike traditional farming practices using pesticides and fertilizers, new farmers, one of the ex- urbanite groups, adopt organic farming or other earth- friendly ways of farming to produce agricultural products. (lu.se)
  • Challenges arise when nutrients, through nitrogen-containing fertilizer, are applied improperly. (agclassroom.org)
  • Effective November 10, 2013, the spreading of livestock manure between November 10 and April 10 in Manitoba is prohibited under The Environment Act: Livestock Manure and Mortalities Management Regulation, unless otherwise noted. (climatechangeconnection.org)
  • At the same time Pilgrims settled in America in 1620, Chinese farmers were collecting nitrogen for fertilizer found in soybean cake, animal manure, and even human night soil hauled from the cities for their crops. (newsecuritybeat.org)
  • The introduction of nitrogen fertilizer increased farmer income and reduced the backbreaking labor of collecting and hauling sewage and manure for fertilizer. (newsecuritybeat.org)
  • According to Dr. Hongmin Dong, a researcher and Deputy Director General at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, manure application not only adds organic matter and improves soil properties, but it also replaces chemical fertilizer. (newsecuritybeat.org)
  • Nitrogen and phosphorus pollution , commonly called nutrient pollution, the bulk of which comes from agricultural fertilizer and manure runoff. (gulfhypoxia.net)
  • However, this success has also produced an explosive growth in toxic algae and phytoplankton from fertilizer and manure runoff. (gulfhypoxia.net)
  • Iowa, Maryland, Minnesota, Vermont and Wisconsin ban the use of manure fertilizer on frozen ground , a practice known to prevent runoff. (gulfhypoxia.net)
  • Nonpoint source (NPS) water pollution regulations are environmental regulations that restrict or limit water pollution from diffuse or nonpoint effluent sources such as polluted runoff from agricultural areas in a river catchments or wind-borne debris blowing out to sea. (wikipedia.org)
  • A High Powered Committee of seven Chief Ministers was set up in July 2019 to discuss, among other things: (i) adoption and time-bound implementation of model Acts by states, and (ii) changes to the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 (which provides for control of production, supply, and trade of essential commodities) for attracting private investment in agricultural marketing and infrastructure. (prsindia.org)
  • Sadly, it is this heavily promoted agricultural practice that also moved nitrogen from being a fertilizer to an air, water, and climate pollutant. (newsecuritybeat.org)
  • Surprising as it may seem, the 1972 Clean Water Act - whose stated goal is fishable and swimmable waters for all - has always exempted most agricultural pollutants from regulation. (gulfhypoxia.net)
  • More ambitiously, in 1995 Florida required conservation actions in the Everglades Agricultural Area such as storm water management, erosion controls and more precise fertilizer application on farms. (gulfhypoxia.net)
  • While restricting both, the regulations distinguish between agricultural and non-agricultural uses of fertilizers. (gtlaw-environmentalandenergy.com)
  • Other than to establish new or renovate existing lawns or non-agricultural turf, phosphorous-containing fertilizers can only be used where needed to promote growth, as demonstrated by a soil test taken within the last three years. (gtlaw-environmentalandenergy.com)
  • The Fertilizers, Farm Feeds, Agricultural Remedies and Stock Remedies Act further prohibits the use of a stock remedy (such as diazinon) for any purpose other than what the label indicates, hence the poisoning of the birds with a stock remedy signifies another contravention of national legislation. (iol.co.za)
  • Secondly, the amendment of Agricultural Development Act in 2000 is a government- led policy that encourage individuals with non- farm occupations to purchase farmland and move to the countryside. (lu.se)
  • To contribute to discussions of rural gentrification, this study present a case study in which agricultural landscape can act as a replacement of natural amenities and create a similar process of landscape- specific gentrification models in the countryside. (lu.se)
  • Students will recognize that fertile soil is a limited resource, describe the role fertilizer plays in increasing food productivity, distinguish between organic and commercial fertilizers, describe how excess nutrients are harmful to the environment, and identify different sources of nutrient pollution. (agclassroom.org)
  • Because nutrients occur naturally in the environment, fertilizer application augments nature's processes. (agclassroom.org)
  • If nutrients are applied at the wrong rate, in the wrong place, from the wrong fertilizer source, or at the wrong time, then the nutrients may be lost to the environment before the plant(s) can take them up and use them for growth. (agclassroom.org)
  • Additional Plant Nutrients as prescribed by regulation. (virginia.gov)
  • 1. No fertilizer label shall bear a statement that connotes or implies the presence of a slowly available or slowly released plant nutrient unless the nutrient or nutrients are identified and guaranteed at a level of at least 15% of the total guarantee for that nutrient or nutrients. (virginia.gov)
  • The regulations, promulgated at 330 CMR 31.00 , were authorized by Chapter 262 of the Acts of 2012 (An Act Relative to the Regulation of Plant Nutrients). (gtlaw-environmentalandenergy.com)
  • The fertilizer use regulations should prove to be an important control over one source of these nutrients - though it may take some time before the impact of these restrictions on water quality can be fully determined. (gtlaw-environmentalandenergy.com)
  • Because phosphate is one of three principal nutrients used in formulating a complete fertilizer, it is imperative that an uninterrupted supply of this material be available to meet the agricultur al requirements of the United States while maintaining a viable phosphate industry which is competitive in world markets. (cdc.gov)
  • Blocking periods for the application of mineral and organic fertilizers with a significant content of nitrogen in Hamburg: In the period from October 15 to January 31 on grassland, permanent grassland and multi-cut field forage cultivation. (hamburg.com)
  • 3.2 of the Code of Virginia, known as the Virginia Fertilizer Act. (virginia.gov)
  • Among this waste was and still is all the nitrogenous (urine and protein) waste, while this waste besides exerting an oxygen demand (like fecal waste) also is a fertilizer for algae, thus contributes to dead zones, now mostly blamed on the runoffs from farms and cities. (circleofblue.org)
  • The agency is authorized to make regulations for the purpose of eradicating and preventing disease in livestock and poultry and certain other animals and birds, including requirements for interstate movement, operation of livestock markets, testing, laboratory fees, and reporting of certain animal diseases. (cornell.edu)
  • The Board of Agriculture and Consumer Services may adopt regulations concerning the disposal of dead poultry, including specifications of disposal pits, incinerators, composting, and rendering. (cornell.edu)
  • When there is more than one definition for the same word that exists in both the Health of Animals Act and the Health of Animals Regulations, both definitions are included referencing the source of the definition (the Act or Regulations) in parentheses after the word. (canada.ca)
  • The agency is authorized to establish definitions, standards of quality and identity and to adopt and enforce regulations dealing with the issuance of permits, production, importation, processing, grading, labeling and sanitary standards for milk and milk products and those products manufactured or sold in semblance to or as substitutes therefor. (cornell.edu)
  • The agency is authorized to establish definitions and standards of quality and identity and to adopt and enforce regulations dealing with the issuance of permits, labeling and sanitary standards for ice cream, ice milk, frozen custards, sherbets, water ices, and related foods and other similar products and those products manufactured or sold in semblance to or as substitutes therefor. (cornell.edu)
  • A. Except as the board designates otherwise in specific cases, the names and definitions for commercial fertilizer shall be those adopted as official by the Association of American Plant Food Control Officials. (virginia.gov)
  • Fertilizers Act ( R.S.C. , 1985, c. (gc.ca)
  • I have over 26 years of environmental compliance experience, and it has been some time since I have attended an environmental regulations workshop. (lion.com)
  • These areas relate to the technological ability of the industry to comply with environmental regulations and performance standards by using the best available technology. (cdc.gov)
  • Regulations are current to 2023-10-31 and last amended on 2019-01-15. (gc.ca)
  • The Thai government in 2019 passed new laws and regulations on cybersecurity and personal data protection that have raised concerns about Thai authorities' broad power to potentially demand confidential and sensitive information, introducing new uncertainties in the technology sector. (state.gov)
  • Under Federal TRI regulations, companies that use certain listed chemicals must report their chemical usage each year to EPA. (lion.com)
  • Agencies will also have to decide whether chemicals that have so far been exempt from oversight should be included in federal regulation, the Associated Press reported. (processingmagazine.com)
  • Recently, the chief security officer at Dow Chemicals, Timothy J. Scott, spoke to a House subcommittee explaining that safety was of paramount importance for the chemical industry but he emphasized the fact that existing regulations were good enough if they were enforced properly. (processingmagazine.com)
  • The Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA) contains extensive provisions for emergency planning and the rights of communities to be informed of toxic chemical releases. (medscape.com)
  • In the United States, the main use of sulfuric acid is in phosphate fertilizer production where it used to convert phosphate rock to phosphoric acid (IARC 1992). (cdc.gov)
  • The basis for nonpoint source pollution regulation is the negative direct and indirect effects on both human health and the environment caused by the pollutants in NPS effluent. (wikipedia.org)
  • Helping municipal clients navigate all aspects of compliance with Clean Air Act regulations for criteria pollutants, hazardous air pollutants, and greenhouse gases. (bdlaw.com)
  • 1. In exercising its right to impose reasonable conditions upon the bringing of suits, a state properly may treat as a separate class actions to recover damages resulting to crops from harmful or deficient fertilizers, and require a chemical analysis as a condition precedent, without excluding other evidence. (justia.com)
  • Error to a judgment of the Supreme Court of North Carolina affirming a judgment of nonsuit in an action to recover damages to a tobacco crop alleged to have resulted from the use of fertilizer bought from the defendant and alleged to have been inferior in quality and to have contained harmful ingredients. (justia.com)
  • The agency is authorized to promulgate and enforce rules and regulations governing the equipment, standards and procedures used in receiving, weighing, measuring, sampling, and testing of milk or other fluid dairy products when the results are to be used for the purpose of inspection, check testing, or as a basis for payment in buying or selling. (cornell.edu)
  • NASDA supports the rights of state jurisdictions to adopt and enforce statutes, regulations, or policies that may be more restrictive than federal requirements in order to have necessary protections of animal health and animal industries in their respective states. (nasda.org)
  • As of March 2020, the government is still in the process of considering and implementing regulations to enforce laws on Cyber Security and Personal Data Protection. (state.gov)
  • The House did not clear the two-thirds mark needed to overturn Biden's veto of a resolution that would have blocked the administration's recent Waters of the U.S. (WOTUS) regulation. (ifca.com)
  • If the veto override had succeeded in both the House and Senate, a Congressional Review Act resolution would have taken effect to overturn the Biden definition of WOTUS, which claimed a broader jurisdiction than former President Donald Trump's administration had sought. (ifca.com)
  • Biden's EPA, like Obama's before him, wants to control your land and livelihood through unnecessary regulations like the WOTUS rule and 30 x 30. (floppingaces.net)
  • Proper nutrient application, through fertilizer , improves plant growth and crop yield. (agclassroom.org)
  • 6 ) construction, work or activities to be carried out in aquatic reserves, biodiversity reserves or ecological reserves, or on land set aside for reserve purposes, if an authorization has been issued by the Minister under the Natural Heritage Conservation Act ( chapter C-61.01 ). (gouv.qc.ca)
  • This is a revised edition of the law, prepared by the Law Revision Commissioner under the authority of the Law Revision Act, Chapter 3 of the Laws of Belize, Revised Edition 1980 - 1990. (bvsalud.org)
  • In an action to recover damage to a crop alleged to have resulted from fertilizer of inferior quality and containing deleterious ingredients, in which the plaintiff was nonsuited for not having procured a chemical analysis as required by the act, held that the requirement was not arbitrary, but reasonable, and consistent with the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. (justia.com)
  • In China, the overuse rate for chemical fertilizer varies by crop and region - but overall, it exceeds 50 percent. (newsecuritybeat.org)
  • A fire that erupted Monday night at a fertilizer plant in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, continues to burn endangering thousands of people in the area who have had to evacuate or shelter-in-place. (progressivereform.org)
  • They buried a small fish with the corn seed to provide nitrogen fertilizer to the growing plant. (newsecuritybeat.org)
  • U.S. President Barack Obama has instructed federal agencies to start a probe into safety rules at chemical plants as part of a project intended to prevent incidents similar to the deadly blast at the fertilizer plant in West, Texas in April. (processingmagazine.com)
  • The department is authorized to develop programs of general relief to farmers affected by major disasters and to make regulations respecting these programs and governing disaster loans for farmers. (cornell.edu)
  • The solution seems clear: Those who cause the pollution should be required to pay for the cleanup, using regulations to ensure that farmers reduce nutrient pollution. (gulfhypoxia.net)
  • Instead, the Clean Water Act relies on voluntary action from farmers. (gulfhypoxia.net)
  • Ammonium nitrate is not subject to the federal RMP rules, even though fenceline communities have called for EPA to regulate this chemical - and facilities that use this chemical like fertilizer plants - under this program for years. (progressivereform.org)
  • Most plants, however, need fertilizer to grow. (newsecuritybeat.org)
  • Even though the investigation of the explosion in Texas is still under way, the conclusion from a preliminary report sent in June to the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee stated that regulations applied at fertilizer plants at present are not strict enough and are far more lenient in comparison to similar regulations in other countries. (processingmagazine.com)
  • The U.S. House on Last Tuesday failed to override a President Joe Biden veto, which means the administration's regulation stays in place expanding which waters and wetlands can be regulated under the federal Clean Water Act. (ifca.com)
  • Under Biden, farm input prices like fertilizer and diesel for the Ag industry have skyrocketed. (floppingaces.net)
  • That's why I am introducing the 30 x 30 Termination Act to block the Biden Administration's land-grab attempt. (floppingaces.net)
  • Applications of phosphorous-containing fertilizers must comply with various setbacks from waterbodies, water supply sources and impervious areas. (gtlaw-environmentalandenergy.com)
  • 3) A statement given for the purposes of subsection (1) of this section shall have effect as a warranty by the seller that the particulars contained therein are correct, subject to any limits of error which may be prescribed, notwithstanding that any agreement or notice to the contrary has been entered into or given or that the statement does not comply with any regulation made for the purposes of this section. (acts.ie)
  • Statement to be given by seller of fertiliser, feeding stuff, compound feeding stuff or mineral mixture. (acts.ie)
  • 1) A person who sells any fertiliser, feeding stuff, compound feeding stuff or mineral mixture shall give to the purchaser a written statement containing the prescribed particulars with respect to the fertiliser, feeding stuff, compound feeding stuff or mineral mixture, and shall give the statement at the prescribed time and, where a form for the statement is prescribed, in that form. (acts.ie)
  • 2) Regulations for the purposes of this section may contain different provisions in relation to different fertilisers, feeding stuffs, compound feeding stuffs or mineral mixtures or different classes thereof. (acts.ie)
  • 7) Where any fertiliser, feeding stuff, compound feeding stuff or mineral mixture is delivered to a purchaser in two or more consignments, the foregoing provisions of this section shall apply to each consignment as though it were the subject of a separate sale. (acts.ie)
  • The PSA is sometimes seen as a product of Progressive Era antitrust attitudes, but it was just as much about the meat price shocks associated with the United States' entering World War I. The act established rules and regulations to limit corruption among the major meat-packers of the time, making sure that they couldn't control both the stockyards that held livestock and the processing facilities that purchased the animals. (thebreakthrough.org)
  • The Congressional Review Act ("CRA") was passed by Congress in 1996 for the purpose of allowing congressional lawmakers to review and overturn regulations adopted by federal agencies. (nationalaglawcenter.org)
  • The Commission is expected to adopt an implementing act, in which it will develop the rules in greater depth and set out the requirements on reporting emissions. (cuatrecasas.com)
  • DAR may impose penalties of up to $1,000 for violations of the regulations (with each day of violation constituting a separate offense). (gtlaw-environmentalandenergy.com)
  • Some investors have nonetheless expressed views that the framework is overly restrictive, with a lack of consistency and transparency in rule-making and interpretation of law and regulations. (state.gov)
  • Nearly 600 residents were killed by a massive fertilizer explosion in Texas City, Texas, in 1947. (progressivereform.org)
  • In 2013, 15 first responders and workers were killed by the ammonium nitrate explosion at the West Fertilizer Company in West, Texas. (progressivereform.org)
  • The U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board has also called for stronger regulation of ammonium nitrate and a preliminary report it issued after the 2013 West Fertilizer explosion recognized that the fertilizer industry has produced alternatives that practically eliminate the risk of accidental explosion posed by ammonium nitrate. (progressivereform.org)
  • The Exceptions to the Regulations in favour of the ISPs and Telcos only apply to prosecutions under these Regulations themselves, and simply do not apply to prosecutions under the Terrorism Act 2006 (which is not amended by these Regulations, and which has no provision for a Statutory Code of Practice). (hostingprod.com)
  • Disinfection byproducts for which regulations have been established have been identified in drinking water, including trihalomethanes, haloacetic acids, bromate, and chlorite. (cfpua.org)
  • In 1991, EPA published a regulation to control lead and copper in drinking water. (cfpua.org)
  • Injectors take a small portion of concentrated fertilizer solution from a stock tank and inject it into the water line. (uga.edu)
  • As water passes through the Hozon, it creates a suction that draws fertilizer solution from a concentrate tank. (uga.edu)
  • Recognizing that storm water discharges contributed significantly to the pollution of the nation's waterways, Congress, with the enactment of the federal Water Quality Act of 1987, required the United States Environmental Protection Agency to develop a program for regulating municipal storm water discharges. (findlaw.com)
  • Although the federal government cannot regulate agriculture under the Clean Water Act, states can. (gulfhypoxia.net)
  • The Obama administration is mulling regulatory guidance for the Clean Water Act that would reinstate language that was proposed by the George W. Bush administration, but was stymied by opposition from industry groups. (circleofblue.org)
  • Federal water regulations have been in a state of confusion since a 2006 U.S. Supreme Court decision did not produce a majority opinion clarifying what qualifies as a wetland or as "navigable waters" under the Clean Water Act. (circleofblue.org)
  • Successfully assisting municipal entities in consent decree negotiations and renegotiations with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Justice with respect to long term control plans for stormwater management and sewer overflow, green infrastructure, and other Clean Water Act (CWA) permitting and compliance issues. (bdlaw.com)
  • All public water systems in the United States are required to follow the standards and regulations set by the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). (cdc.gov)
  • EPA regulations that protect public water systems do not apply to privately owned wells or other individual water systems. (cdc.gov)
  • In 1974, Congress passed the Safe Drinking Water Act . (cdc.gov)
  • but state regulations vary widely, and there is no requirement to report well water monitoring data at a national level.9 The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is the nation's primary agency providing information and research on groundwater resources. (cdc.gov)
  • The FDA regulations for bottled water generally correspond with EPA standards for chemical or microbial contaminants. (cdc.gov)
  • Most projections say that tighter regulation, cleaner sources of electricity and higher-mileage vehicles will cut industrial emissions enough by the end of this century that farm emissions will be starved of the other ingredients necessary to create aerosols. (sonnenseite.com)
  • The CBAM will initially apply to the import of goods the production of which is most carbon intensive (i.e., cement, iron and steel, aluminum, fertilizers, electricity and hydrogen, listed in Annexes I and II), although the regulation envisages a gradual further extension of the scope . (cuatrecasas.com)
  • The culprit: fumes from nitrogen-rich fertilizers and animal waste that combine in the air with industrial emissions to form solid particles - a huge source of disease and death. (sonnenseite.com)
  • The good news: if industrial emissions decline in coming decades, as most projections say, fine-particle pollution will go down even if fertilizer use doubles as expected. (sonnenseite.com)
  • During this period, importers of goods covered by the regulation will be obliged to inform of the greenhouse gas (" GHG ") emissions caused directly or indirectly by their imports, without being subject to any payment or adjustment. (cuatrecasas.com)
  • Over one hundred chemical disasters occur annually in the U.S., showing the serious problems with EPA's existing Clean Air Act Risk Management Plan (RMP) Rule, the federal regulations intended to prevent chemical disasters. (progressivereform.org)
  • Accidental explosions of ammonium nitrate fertilizers are among the deadliest industrial disasters in U.S. history. (progressivereform.org)
  • This regulation is known as the Lead and Copper Rule (also referred to as the LCR). (cfpua.org)
  • Act current to 2023-11-14 and last amended on 2020-07-01. (gc.ca)
  • Regulations are current to 2023-09-13 and last amended on 2023-02-15. (gc.ca)
  • The regulation establishes a transitional period beginning on October 1, 2023, and ending in 2026 . (cuatrecasas.com)
  • BOI offers businesses assistance in navigating Thai regulations and provides investment incentives to qualified domestic and foreign investors through straightforward application procedures. (state.gov)
  • Annex III of the Regulation excludes from its scope of application goods originating from certain countries (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland) and certain territories , including Ceuta and Melilla, among others. (cuatrecasas.com)
  • 2 These Regulations come into force on February 1, 2002. (gc.ca)
  • 3.1) In this Regulation, a reference to a geographic area in Schedule 1, 2 or 3 is a reference to a geographic area named and described in Schedule 1, 2 or 3 to Ontario Regulation 180/03 (Division of Ontario into Geographic Areas) made under the Territorial Division Act, 2002 . (ontario.ca)
  • or of liberty to contract with the manufacturer on other terms, provides that no suit for damages from results of the use of fertilizer may be brought except after chemical analysis showing deficiency of ingredients, unless it shall appear to the State Department of Agriculture that, during the season, the manufacturer has, in other fertilizer offered, employed ingredient outlawed by the act or offered any kind of dishonest or fraudulent goods. (justia.com)
  • Authority to make regulations of the department lies with, among others, the Board of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the Milk Commission, the Potato Board, and the Charitable Gaming Board. (cornell.edu)
  • To view a list of all statutes that amend this act, visit the Chronological History . (pa.us)
  • RMP regulations require facilities that use extremely hazardous substances to develop a risk management plan that identifies the potential effects of a chemical accident, the steps a facility is taking to prevent an accident, and the emergency response procedures should an accident occur. (lion.com)
  • The act provides opportunity for official chemical analysis, limiting, however, the time and manner in which samples for analysis may be taken, and declares that a certificate of the state chemist of an analysis made by him of any sample drawn under these provisions shall be prima facie proof that the fertilizer was of the value and constituency shown by such analysis. (justia.com)
  • and to promulgate regulations for the efficient enforcement of the adulteration, misbranding and false advertising provisions of the Virginia Food Act. (cornell.edu)
  • Camarillo said most fertilizer company use a 100 percent nitrogen concentrate. (keyt.com)
  • materials so excluded are thereby subjected to regulations as commercial feed. (cornell.edu)
  • The most daunting penalties, however, are found in Threatened or Protection Species Regulations of the National Environmental Management: Biodiversity Act, under which a person who, without a permit, kills a threatened or protected species with a poison may be liable to a fine of R100 000 or three times the value of such an animal and/or a five-year prison sentence. (iol.co.za)
  • U.S. scientist Norman Borlaug (who won the Nobel Prize) and China's Yuan Longping (who won the World Food Prize) both promoted the use of chemical fertilizer to increase yield and save millions of people from starvation. (newsecuritybeat.org)
  • We expect population to go up, and to produce more food, we will need more fertilizer. (sonnenseite.com)
  • NASDA supports funding the NAHLN at a level that allows it to achieve success with capabilities and capacity for surveillance of, and response to, diseases introduced naturally or through an act of bioterrorism. (nasda.org)
  • a document issued by the Minister under section 160 of the Health of Animals Regulations for the purpose of importing animals or things. (canada.ca)
  • It is still totally unclear how a genuine Terrorism Act Section 3 Notice by a Constable, can be distinguished from an improperly authorised or a fake "takedown" censorship notice which is used to maliciously harass and deny service to the innocent. (hostingprod.com)
  • b) if a Director described in clause (a) has not been appointed, any Director appointed under section 3 of the Act in respect of section 11 of the Act. (ontario.ca)
  • 4.1) In this Regulation, a reference to a Class 12 pesticide is a reference to a pesticide that has been classified into that class under section 8.1. (ontario.ca)
  • The Act received the assent of the President of Pakistan on December 3, 1997. (who.int)
  • The regulation providing the adjustment mechanism was approved by the European Parliament and the Council on May 10, 2023 ( Regulation (EU) 2023/956 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 10 May 2023 ) and was published in the Official Journal of the European Union on May 16, 2023. (cuatrecasas.com)