Olainfarm: Audited annual report 2020
The Company reviewed operations in the main markets
JSC Olainfarm continued investments to modernize its operations and worked on clinical trials
Group s revenues in 2020 were EUR 122,157 thousand, net profit was EUR 9,478 thousand.
Group actively engaged to improve operations and financial results of subsidiaries
In 2020, JSC Olainfarm approved its new strategy Forward! 2020-2025 . The main goal is to become one of the TOP 10 largest pharmaceutical manufacturing companies in Central and Eastern Europe by 2025, sustainably supplying healthcare products and services in specific therapeutic areas: cardiovascular diseases, neurology, psychiatry, and the treatment of urinary diseases. In 2020 Olainfarm Group continued the transformation process towards sustainable growth. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, it was a year of challenges to remain operational efficient, where innovative ways of thinking to break the traditional way of conducting busin
Met dank overgenomen van Europese Rekenkamer, gepubliceerd op donderdag 29 april 2021.
More than 1 000 financial instruments were used across the Member States for the 2007-2013 EU cohesion policy. A new special report published today by the European Court of Auditors (ECA) shows that the necessary steps have been taken to verify the eligibility of expenditure at closure. Checks have yielded tangible results, although some errors - one large - remained undetected. But overall, the auditors note that most problems encountered in the 2007-2013 period have been cleared up.
Financial instruments under shared management (FISM) were a relatively new but important method of EU cohesion policy financing in the 2007-2013 programming period. Their contributions totalled €16.4 billion, of which €11.3 billion was made up of EU co-financing through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and the European Social Fund (ESF). Eligibility verifications at closure should address errors and
The development of the Põhja-Tallinn Health Center is set to be completed by the end of the year, also allowing West Tallinn Central Hospital (LTKH) family physicians and specialists to receive patients in Kopli.
PEOPLE are being invited to head to Brockhole visitor centre for a taste of the future. Visitors will be able to have their say on using driverless, electric travel to get around the National Park. Of the 19 million visitors that come to the Lake District each year, 89 per cent travel by car – creating around a third of the National Park’s total carbon emissions. And now state-of-the-art, self-driving vehicles are being considered as a sustainable transport alternative by the Lake District National Park Authority – to reduce congestion and pollution. Emma Moody, the Authority’s Lead Adviser for Sustainable Transport says in future the pods could offer eco-friendly on-demand car sharing and could provide an option for visitors’ ‘last mile’.
A £2 MILLION project to improve the Lyne Burn corridor in Dunfermline faces a shortfall after a bid for cash was declined at the last minute . Nature Scot s decision to withdraw funding leaves Fife Council having to find £500,000 in their capital plan to ensure the long-awaited greenspace proposals go ahead. Councillor Helen Law, convener of the City of Dunfermline area committee, said: This is a really exciting project for Dunfermline and builds on work which has been ongoing for many years. The most recent proposals seemed in jeopardy as Fife Council s application for funding for £650,000 to Nature Scot was declined at the last minute.