Category: Business

  • Turkey’s largest solar power plant built

    Turkey’s largest solar power plant built

    Turkey’s largest solar power plant with a capacity of 500 kilowatts was built in the province of Burdur, Zaman newspaper reported.

    solar_power_station_070313

    The plant was built under a Turkish-Japanese joint venture and owned by Turkish Seiso Enerji A.Ş and Japanese Panasonic. Production at the plant located in an area of 2500 square kilometres will start by the end of this year.

    The solar power plant will serve the Mercan Mermer A.Ş Company for the production of marble.

    According to the newspaper, Turkey which has recently been focused on the production of electricity from renewable energy sources has issued some more licenses for the construction of solar power plants. The country plans to complete the construction of several solar power plants with a total capacity of 70 MW by the end of this year.

    In early 2014, Turkey will also start construction of solar power plants with a total capacity of 600 megawatts.

    Earlier, the Turkish government stated that private sector projects aimed at producing electricity from renewable energy sources will be partially funded by the state.

    via Turkey’s largest solar power plant built – AzerNews.

  • VWR Acquires Prolab in Turkey

    VWR Acquires Prolab in Turkey

    VWR International acquired Prolab Laboratuar Teknolojileri in Istanbul, Turkey. VWR is a global provider of laboratory supplies, equipment and services with worldwide sales in excess of $4.1 billion in 2012.

    Prolab is an independent distributor of laboratory consumables, chemicals, and equipment, supplying product to customers in the pharmaceutical, analytical, industrial, education and research industries. The company has served as a distributor of VWR products in Turkey for several years.

    “In alignment with our recent acquisitions in China and Latin America, Prolab will allow VWR to further expand our geographic reach to better serve our global customers in an increasingly important market for VWR,” said Manuel Brocke-Benz, president & CEO.

  • Turkey’s dairy product exports to EU to restart

    Turkey’s dairy product exports to EU to restart

    Turkey has obtained the right to export dairy products to the European Union which approves that Turkish firms comply with the union’s standards, Agriculture Minister Mehdi Eker says

    Turkey has gained the right to export dairy products to the European Union once again after a period of 13 years, Agriculture Minister Mehdi Eker announced yesterday.

    “The EU’s Directorate General for Health and Consumers has confirmed that Turkish firms comply with EU standards for selling dairy products to the EU members. The legislation about the issue will enter into force on April 3,” Eker said at the introduction meeting of the dairy exports project, which is being carried out by the ministry and the Packaged Milk and Milk Products Industrialists Association (ASÜD).

    The minister stated that Turkey’s dairy exports to the EU had been halted in 2000 when the union took a decision on dairy exports regulations and found Turkey’s standards low. He also said that Turkey had not been able to export dairy products to other countries that also applied the same EU standards. “Some Middle East countries did not import dairy products from Turkey because it could not be exported to the EU,” he said.

    The EU did not allow Turkey to export dairy products because Turkey was not able to provide safeguards against animal diseases, did not take adequate measures on animal health, or provide control mechanisms in the dairy production phase, including hygiene and laboratory conditions.

    Turkey complies with EU

    This approval by the EU shows that the standards applied by the Turkish state, private sector and laboratories on animal health, animal products and the struggle against animal diseases are at the same level as the union, according to Eker.

    He stressed that efforts had been made since 2006 to restart dairy exports to the EU. “A seven-year struggle has come to an end with a success,” he said.

    Six Turkish firms have been approved to export dairy products to the EU for the first phase. They are Aynes Gıda, Pinar Süt, Ak Gıda, Tat Konserve Sek Süt İşletmesi, Natura Gıda and Unilever’s Algida.

    Eker also noted that breeding incentives had increased to 2.2 billion Turkish Liras last year from 83 million liras, adding that they expected it to reach a better point this year.

    He also revealed that a “Turkey Dairy and Meat Institution” would be established after Cabinet approval this week.

    via Turkey’s dairy product exports to EU to restart — BlackSeaGrain – All information on agriculture and food industry.

  • LEGO: We’re Scrapping Star Wars Toy, But Not Because of Muslim Backlash | TIME.com

    LEGO: We’re Scrapping Star Wars Toy, But Not Because of Muslim Backlash | TIME.com

    Turkish Forum Danışma Kurulu Üyesi Birol Kılıç’ın girişimleri ile ırkçı öğeler içerdiği ve Ayasofya’ya benzediği için şikayet edilen ürünü, Lego artık üretmeme kararı aldı.

    lego-star-wars-jabbas-palace

    In January we asked “Is this LEGO Star Wars toy racist?” in reference to LEGO’s blocky rendition of Jabba the Hutt’s desert palace, as depicted at the beginning of the film Return of the Jedi.

    The Turkish Cultural Community of Austria recently caused a stir by claiming the toy’s design was racially motivated, arguing that it was based on the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul and the Jami’ al-Kabir mosque in Beirut. Also: that the figures found in the set exemplify “racial prejudice and vulgar insinuations against … Orientals and Asians as sneaky and criminal personalities (slaveholders, leaders of criminal organizations, terrorists, criminals, murderers, human sacrifice)…”

    It seems the toy’s demise is now at hand: LEGO says it plans to retire Jabba’s Palace, leading some to conclude the company’s caving to backlash. Not so, says LEGO in an Apr. 2 statement:

    A few media have reported that the product is being discontinued due to the mentioned criticism. This is, however, not correct … As a normal process products in the LEGO Star Wars assortment usually have a life-cycle of one to three years after which they leave the assortment and may be renewed after some years. The LEGO Star Wars product Jabba’s Palace 9516 was planned from the beginning to be in the assortment only until the end of 2013 as new exciting models from the Star Wars universe will follow.

    Still, the TCCA seems to be greeting the move with celebratory rhetoric: “We are very grateful and congratulate Lego on the decision to take Jabba’s Palace out of production,” said TCCA president Birol Killic (via RT).

    Despite LEGO’s denial that the toy’s removal is backlash-related, it devotes most of its statement to defending the toy as creatively anodyne, noting that it “regrets that the product has caused the members of the Turkish cultural community to interpret [the toy] wrongly, but … the design of the product only refers to the fictional content of the Star Wars saga.”

    via LEGO: We’re Scrapping Star Wars Toy, But Not Because of Muslim Backlash | TIME.com.

  • Houston Welcomes Turkish Airways’ Direct Service to Istanbul

    Houston Welcomes Turkish Airways’ Direct Service to Istanbul

    turkish-airways-1

    Turkish Airways Flight 34 arrives at Bush Intercontinental Airport / Photo credit: Brent Clanton

    Houston is adding depth to its reputation as an international city of trade with the establishment of direct-service air travel to Istanbul, Turkey via Turkish Airlines.

    Houston Mayor Annise Parker welcomed an entire delegation of Turkish dignitaries to Bush Intercontinental last night to usher-in a new age of commerce between Houston, Texas and Turkey.

    Houston Mayor Annise Parker welcomes the Turkish Trade Delegation to Bush Intercontinental Airport / Phot credit: Brent Clanton

    “It’s a bridge in the world, and it’s bridging the cultures, bridging the economy, and making it possible for us as Americans, and them as Turkish people, to communicate and do business for the future,” enthused Farouk Shami, Chairman of Farouk Systems Group, on hand to greet the first 777 flight to arrive direct from Istanbul.

    Shami has done his homework, and with today’s signing of trade agreements with Houston and Turkey, he’s ready to do more business abroad: ”We’ll be working with two electronics tools for environmental beauty there,” Shami says.  ”The economy is great in Turkey, and one of the fastest-growing economies in the world. I think we can share knowledge on how to improve our economy, as well.”  Shami has already made three trips to Turkey to set up manufacturing and other alliances.  ”There’s a big market that I can expand Farouk Business Systems into that,” he says.

    When Turkey was shunned by the rest of Europe, the country turned eastward, and developed trade with partners in Asia and beyond. That’s turning into good fortune for Texas, with trade agreements opening the gates for more commerce…and easier access with Turkish Airways’ direct flights.

    Houston’s Turkish Consul General, Cemalettin Aydin, says, ”It’s quite big because this flight will, I think, connect Houston to, I believe, one of the most-dynamic places in the middle of three continents, that is, Turkey, between Europe, Asia and Africa.”

    Turkish Airways will operate four direct flights a week, increasing to six a week in July. Shami is looking forward to the trade reciprocity:  ”Turkish Delights, for sure,” he laughs. “That is most-popular, you know, and they sell lots of hundred of millions of that, and we like sweets. That’s the first thing that comes to my mind.”

    via Houston Welcomes Turkish Airways’ Direct Service to Istanbul | News 92 FM.

  • Buy a home in Istanbul for real Turkish delight

    Buy a home in Istanbul for real Turkish delight

    Istanbul has glamour and views straight out of a Bond film, but there’s a home for every budget.

    istanbul_2522656c

    Picture perfect: even in the city, the scenery of Istanbul’s seven hills is simply breathtaking; even more so when you can see it for £30,000  Photo: Funkyfood London – Paul Williams

    By Clive Aslet7:00AM BST 02 Apr 20133 Comments

    James Bond leaps over the pantiled roofs of the old city in Istanbul in the opening scenes of Skyfall, against the dazzling backdrop of the Bosporus and Golden Horn. He has been here before, most memorably in From Russia With Love, released in 1963. But he might well be astounded by the changes that have overtaken the ancient capital of Byzantium and the Ottoman Empire in the past 50 years. In that time Istanbul has mushroomed from a city of one million inhabitants to a sprawling colossus of 13.5 million. Nobody could call the urbanism that greets the visitor a miracle of well-ordered planning, but not all comparisons are to the bad: trees have grown up over the hills that, when Sean Connery was Bond, looked bald. As for glamorous living space, an international, pleasure-seeking man of mystery would now feel completely at home.

    The top foreign nation buying property here is Russia, but in second place comes Britain. This year, Erdogˇan Bayraktar, Minister for Environment and Urban Planning, expects that the total number of real estate sales will double. While most foreigners look on the coast, a report by PwC (PricewaterhouseCoopers) and the Urban Land Institute last year identified Istanbul as having the most attractive property investment market in Europe. In contrast to the stagnant economies of the Eurozone and Britain, Turkey is romping ahead. Recently, the country reformed its property laws, making it possible for foreigners to buy double the amount of land in Turkey than was previously allowed.

    “Istanbul is a big place,” says Julian Walker of Spot Blue, an agent specialising in Turkey. “We offer anything from luxury houses at $15 million to studio flats for $60,000.” In the past 20 years, apartment buildings have mushroomed west, towards Ataturk International Airport and beyond, the more distant properties being “a bit cheap and cheerful”. But the city is safer than others of its size, and in contrast to Britain, the Eurozone and America, it is practically fizzing with energy.

    The British author and photographer Emma Levine, who has travelled the world, first came to Istanbul in 1989 and “fell in love with it straight away”. In 2001, a friend told her that he was buying a flat there, and she “assumed he’d won the lottery”. The price, however, was just £7,000. Admittedly, the Tarlabasi neighbourhood is “rough around the edges”, and the flat needed work, but Emma decided that she would follow his example. She paid £13,000 for a “fantastic” two-bedroom flat at the top of a six-storey building in Tepebasi. “The location is superb – opposite the Pera Palace Hotel, on a vibrant residential street with restaurants and small hotels. It’s just a mile from Taksim Square.” A big draw was a “huge” roof terrace and balcony. The value of property in the area has gone up by 10 times.

    The rocketing property market reflects Turkey’s economic success. Competition between entrepreneurs has driven prices for the best homes to dizzying heights. The latest apartments are built to superb specifications and, for the first time, are stamped with the kudos of international brand names. Your car can be parked, your flat cleaned, your shopping done, your dinners cooked, your parties served, your decor provided, all by the hotel group Kempinski (which owns the most glamorous hotel in the city) and the international design company Armani/Casa.

    via Buy a home in Istanbul for real Turkish delight – Telegraph.