Published: 18 Sep 09 07:34 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/22152/20090918/
Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt succeeded during a summit in Brussels on Thursday in convincing European leaders to agree to push for limits on bonuses for bankers and for faster movement on climate negotiations.
External link: EU leaders' agreed language ahead of the G20 »
What do you think? Leave your comment below.
Politicians in the small Swedish town of Falköping want to give alcoholics and drug users a glass-encased zone in the middle of a central square, saying it would lessen public disturbances and allow "the down and out" to socialize. READ () »
The European Commission opened an in-depth probe on Wednesday to see if state aid given to Scandinavian Airlines by Sweden and Denmark conformed to EU rules. READ () »
In The Local's new Fashion Fix column on Swedish trends, Englishwoman Victoria Hussey gets up close and personal with shoes - namely "brothel creepers" from WWII that have been making a steady return to Stockholm pavements. READ () »
Imported frozen raspberries should be boiled before eaten according to new advice from Sweden's National Food Agency, which warns that the berries may carry the novo virus that is more known for causing winter vomiting disease. READ () »
A deceased patient who had no relatives was left in a room for five days at the Örebro University Hospital before staff realized the body was still there. READ () »
Stockholm bus traffic was at a standstill Wednesday as drivers launched a major strike at midnight, but a group of Conservative youths disrupted the action by replacing a bus route between two of the city's major hospitals. READ () »
Sweden Democrat MP Kent Ekeroth has to pay tax for money sent to his bank account as donations to two far-right websites that he claims to have nothing to do with editorially. READ () »
For some foreigners living in Sweden, a natural "inner Swede" can develop that often doesn't show its face until you're back home again. The Local's Patrick Reilly lists the top ten ways this inner Swede can change your life. READ () »
| 19/06 | GE Money Bank söker en senior riskanalytikerGE Money Bank | Danderyd, STHM |
| 19/06 | Lighting Category DirectorSchneider Electric | Malmö, SKÅ |
| 19/06 | Senior Electrical EngineerEuropean Spallation Source ESS AB | SKÅ |
| 19/06 | Senior Manager/Manager with Finance, Risk & Regulatory experience within Banking and Capital MarketsBearingPoint SE | Stockholm, STHM |
| 19/06 | Solution Architect to Teracom GroupTeracom Group | Stockholm, STHM |
| 19/06 | Staff EngineerPoolia AB | Lund, SKÅ |
More news from Germany at thelocal.de
More news from France at thelocal.fr
More news from Norway at thelocal.no
More news from Switzerland at thelocal.ch
Register now for:
> Free use of noticeboard
> Special discounts
> Weekly news roundup
> Unlimited use of discuss
Kentucky’s Bourbon Royalty Visits Sweden »
"He's not a celebrity in Sweden, but everyone in Kentucky knows the name Fred Noe. Even more people know the name of his great-grandfather, Jim Beam." READ »
Your comments about this article:
The comments below have not been moderated in advance and are not produced by The Local unless clearly stated. Readers are responsible for the content of their own comments. Comments that breach our terms and conditions will be removed.
Specifically, EU leaders agreed that bonuses should be "set at an appropriate level" relative to fixed compensation and make them dependent on the performance of the company or business unit.
There is enough wriggle room in that statement to ensure that things can continue exactly as before. Essentially meaningless. There is no active regulation or intervention proposed anywhere in that statement.
Now turning attention to the second topic which was regulating emissions and controlling climate change. I am not clear what the following statement means:-
"We need increased effort and we need to discuss financing" of contributions towards developing countries' share, both towards 2020 levels and also in the run up to the expiry of the current Kyoto protocol, which expires in 2012.
Is this a plan to pay countries to control their emissions and if so how do we get value for money and how is to be policed. Given that countries like China and India are massively increasing emissions as their economies expand we would effectively have to pay them a handout equivalent to their projected GDP increases to stop this from happening - assuming they didn't just take the money and run. Utter madness.