Kiev, nei territori occupati 350 miliardi in risorse naturali

epa03086902 (FILE) A file photo dated 07 July 2005 showing an earth digger dumping dirt on to a large truck at the Antaibao open-air coal mine near Shuozhou, Shanxi Province, China. Geneva-based World Trade Organization (WTO) dismissed a Chinese appeal on 30 January 2012 and upheld its decision that Beijing’s practice of limiting certain raw materials including magnesium should end. Western countries that won the trade dispute over Chinese export restrictions on industrial raw materials, have already set their sights on a new goal: prying open Beijing's restrictive policies on rare earths. However, China is unlikely to budge on these minerals, now sought after by high-tech industries, unless there is a specific new ruling by the World Trade Organization (WTO), expert Jaakko Kooroshy said 31 January 2012. EPA/QILAI SHEN
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(ANSA-AFP) - KIEV, 23 FEB - L'Ucraina stima di avere risorse naturali "essenziali" per un valore di 350 miliardi di dollari, tra cui il titanio, nel territorio occupato dalla Russia. Lo ha affermato il vice primo ministro ucraino Yulia Svyrydenko. "Abbiamo informazioni secondo cui, sfortunatamente, nel territorio temporaneamente occupato si trovano materiali essenziali per un valore di circa 350 miliardi di dollari", ha detto in una conferenza stampa a Kiev, nel contesto delle tensioni con gli Stati Uniti in merito a un accordo proposto sui minerali ucraini. (ANSA-AFP).
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