BETA

13 Amendments of Adriana POLI BORTONE

Amendment 13 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Recital A a (new)
Aa. whereas overweight/obesity, together with smoking, dyslipidemia, hypertension, diabetes, malnutrition, a sedentary lifestyle, stress and atmospheric pollution, accounts for more than 92% of the overall risk of cardiovascular disease and is the leading cause of death in Europe (1.9 million deaths every year in the EU 25),
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 164 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 14
14. Further, asks Member States, local entities and school authorities to monitor and to improve the quality and nutritional standards of school meals and to review portion sizes; asks for a total ban on the sale of foods and beverages high in fat, salt or sugar and of poor nutritional value in schools; advocates instead making fresh fruit and vegetables available in vending machines; invites the Member States to ensure that more hours of school timetables are devoted to physical activities and to provide plans for the construction of new public sports facilities;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 179 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 15
15. Considers it essential that every kind of sponsorship and advertising for so-called HSSF products (high in sugar, salt, fat) of poor nutritional value should be banned in schools; asks for a voluntary commitment by all sports organisations and teams in order to promote balanced nutrition and physical activity and urges them to avoid sponsorship and promotion of food of poor nutritional value;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 220 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 19
19. Calls for a ban on industrial trans-fatty acids and urges EU Member States to follow good practices in controlling the content of substances in food (e.g. salt content); nevertheless points out that special exemptions should be provided for PDO (protected designation of origin) and PGI (protected geographical indication) and traditional products in order to preserve original recipes;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 304 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 27
27. Acknowledges that general practitioners and pharmacists should be made aware of their essential role in the early identification of peopleatients at risk of overweight and the fact that they should be the main actors in thea collaborative effort to fight against the obesity epidemic;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 315 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 28
28. Is convinced of the need for full recognition of the qualification of medical professionals as ‘clinical dietitians’ as well as ‘nutritionists’; urges Member States to promote the presence at school and in all workplaces of these kinds of doctors; considers that in the training of such professionals due attention should be drawn to gender, cultural, ethnic and age differences in the general population;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 324 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 29
29. Calls on the Commission to promote best medical practices as well as information campaigns on obesity-related risks and abdominal obesity in particular and to support prevention training campaigns for healthcare professionals and public information campaigns on prevention of the various cardiovascular disease risk factors; urges the Commission to provide information about the dangers of home diets, especially if they involve the use of anti-obesity drugs taken without medical prescription;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 334 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 30
30. Welcomes the inclusion of ‘diabetes and obesity’ as a priority within the 7th Framework Programme dedicated to health and calls for the other cardiovascular disease risk factors to be included as well;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 340 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 30 a (new)
30a. Urges the Commission to take a more holistic approach to nutrition and make malnutrition, alongside obesity, a key priority in the fields of nutrition and health, incorporating it wherever possible into EU-funded research initiatives and EU-level partnerships;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 342 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 30 b (new)
30b. Calls on the Member States to promote training courses and activities for medical/health professionals aimed at fostering abdominal obesity screening, diagnosis and treatment;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 344 #

2007/2285(INI)

Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 30 c (new)
30c. Calls on the Commission to promote Europe-wide information campaigns aimed at the general public and, in particular, at the medical profession, to raise awareness of the risks of abdominal obesity;
2008/03/26
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 46 #

2005/0281(COD)


Recital 20
(20) There should be no confusion between the various aspects of the waste definition, and appropriate procedures should be applied, where necessary, to by-products that are not waste, on the one hand, or to waste that ceases to be waste, on the other hand. In order to specify certain aspects of the definition of waste, this Directive should clarify: – when substances or objects resulting from a production process not primarily aimed at producing such substances or objects are by-products and not waste. The decision that a substance is not waste can be taken only on the basis of a coordinated approach, to be regularly updated, and where this is consistent with the protection of the environment and human health. If the use of a by-product is allowed under an environmental licence or general environmental rules, this can be used by Member States as a tool to decide that no overall adverse environmental or human health impacts are expected to occur, and – when certain waste ceases to be waste, laying down end-of-waste criteria that provide a high level of environmental protection and an environmental and economic benefit; possible categories of waste for which "end-of-waste" specifications and criteria should be developed are, among others, construction and demolition waste, some ashes and slags, scrap metals, compost, waste paper and glass as well as other selected categories of waste which are clearly identifiable, also by means of existing European technical standards. For the purposes of reaching end-of-waste status, a recovery operation may be as simple as the checking of waste to verify that it fulfils the end-of-waste criteria.
2008/03/06
Committee: ENVI
Amendment 128 #

2005/0281(COD)


Article 5 – paragraph 4 a (new)
1 OJ L 204, 21.7.1998, p. 37. Directive as last amended by Council Directive 2006/96/EC (OJ L 363, 20.12.2006, p. 81). 4a. By..........* the Commission shall, if appropriate, make proposals for determining whether, among others, the following waste streams fall under the provisions of this Article, and if so what specifications should apply to them: compost, aggregates, paper, glass, metal, end-of-life tyres, waste textiles and other selected categories of waste which are clearly identifiable, also by means of existing European technical standards. *5 years after the entry into force of this Directive. Or. en (Based on amendment 45 in first reading)
2008/03/07
Committee: ENVI