Medium-term demand for European cross-border electricity transmission capacity

Energy Policy ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 61 ◽  
pp. 207-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Brancucci Martínez-Anido ◽  
M. Vandenbergh ◽  
L. de Vries ◽  
C. Alecu ◽  
A. Purvins ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
D. Bekaert ◽  
L. Meeus ◽  
D. Van Hertem ◽  
E. Delarue ◽  
B. Delvaux ◽  
...  

Significance This comes as the Huthis have escalated attacks on military and civilian targets in southern Saudi Arabia. These cross-border attacks hit targets often deep within Saudi territory and are a key component of the Huthis’ strategy of slowly increasing pressure on Saudi Arabia. Impacts Over the short and medium term, the Huthis will be able to dedicate more men and materiel to their northern front. The Huthis’ ability to strike within Saudi Arabia points to the inadequacies and limited operational capabilities of Saudi border forces. Such attacks show Huthi ability to take the war to Saudi Arabia, which will help them secure further limited, but strategic, Iranian aid.


2020 ◽  
pp. 27-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.P. Cheglov ◽  
A.N. Stolyarova

The article analyzes the development of the consumer market and domestic trade in Russia in the conditions of permanent crisis and digitalization of the economy. The current trends in the transformation of domestic trade are analyzed, and the place of online sales technologies in the medium term is shown. Institutional models of building trade organizations in the online sphere and the impact of cross-border trade are studied. The development of online structures in the medium term is predicted, as well as the impact of cross-border trade. The article substantiates the acceleration of integration processes in the field of online trade, the merging of offline and online infrastructure, the disappearance of small trading businesses as a market entity, its integration into geographically distributed omnichannel trading systems, the development of which will mean de facto monopolization of the market.


2003 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 227-243 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steve Peers

Following the last update in this Quarterly,1 the European Union (EU) has been quite active in agreeing new measures relating to cross-border policing and criminal law. First of all, the Tampere European Council meeting in October 1999 agreed a list of measures to be adopted to develop the EU's ‘Area of Freedom, Security and Justice’, particularly as regards criminal procedure. Here the European Council requested the Council to agree a work programme on mutual recognition in criminal matters within a year, and to establish an EU organisation facilitating cross-border prosecutions (Eurojust) within 2 years. Following agreement in the meantime on a Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters after 5 years’ negotiations,2 the work programme was duly adopted in November 2000, setting out a list of twenty-four measures which the Council should agree in the medium-term to facilitate cross-border investigations, prosecutions, and enforcement of judgments.3 Several Member States then began to implement this plan, tabling two versions of a proposed Decision to set up Eurojust and also making proposals for ‘Framework Decisions’ to harmonise national laws as regards enforcement of other Member States’ orders to freeze assets and evidence and enforcement of judgments imposing financial penalties.4


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