Brazil is expected to harvest 139.3 million tons of grains and oil seeds in the 2007/08 season, up 5.4% over the previous crop helped by limited diseases and the use of gene-modified seeds to grow stronger plants, said Agroconsult a Brazilian agriculture consultant company.
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced last week that an important countdown to 100% e-ticketing had begun. In 100 days the paper ticket gets put in a museum. On June 1, 2008 we will achieve 100% electronic ticketing, said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA's Director General and CEO.
Falkland Islands hydrocarbons exploration development and the potential to hire a rig for a minimum six-well drilling program advanced considerably on Monday when Desire Petroleum announced that it had accepted the terms of an offer to farm in to three of the company's eighteen exploration prospects in the North Falkland basin.
Argentina's former economy minister Roberto Lavagna claimed that inflation is round 20% departing from the government line that puts the index of rising prices at 8.5% for 2007.
An estimated 500 ornithologists from Argentina are to meet in San Martín de los Andes, Neuquén, next March 5 to seek ways of promoting bird-watching as a form of tourism.
Argentina is scheduled to host a world birdwatchers conference in September.
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said on Monday any United States resistance to sovereign wealth funds investing in the world's largest economy would be counter-productive.
Brazil says that it will start working jointly with Argentina in the construction of a nuclear submarine, the first in Latin America, to be built using French technology, according to reports in the Buenos Aires press.
The number of nights spent in hotels by tourists in 2007 was highest in Spain followed by France, Germany and the United Kingdom according to the latest European statistics. The former Eastern Europe countries however registered the highest growth rate.
The first flight by a commercial airline to be powered partly by biofuel is to take off from London.
Cuban lawmakers will meet to name a new head of state for the first time in nearly a half-century on Sunday, just five days after an ailing, 81-year-old Fidel Castro said he would not accept another term as president.