
U103-C Filter
Materials:
Body: Aluminum(spray-painted)
Technical Specifications:
Working pressure:0.2Mpa
Filter accuracy:30um
Maximum flow rate:220L/min
Medium:gasoline,diesel
Features :
?92*82
M20*1.5
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U103-C 18kg/case of35 19kg/case of35 50×28×35cm/case of35
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
and other barriers to trade, regulatory reform and education. The
methodology is solid and the results revealing—but there s a catch. Only backward countries get the
treatment. Putting rich countries under that kind of spotlight, explains an OECD official ruefully, would be
“politically unacceptable�
fuel dispenser © 2006 .
About sponsorship
Nuclear power
Half life
Nov 9th 2006
From The Economist print edition
The nuclear industry is predicting a rapid expansion—but that will not happen without
government help
“NUCLEAR has to be part of the energy mix,�insists Claude Mandil, the head of the International Energy
Agency (IEA), a t fuel dispenser hink-tank-cum-watchdog for power-hungry countries. He was speaking at the launch
this week of a report that overturned the IEA s previously pessimistic view of the prospects for nuclear
power. It now estimates that nuclear generation will grow by at least 13% by 2030, and perhaps as
much as 40%. The firms that build nuclear plants are making similarly rosy projections. The nuclear
division of General Electric (GE), an American conglomerate, predicts that 66 gigawatts of new capacity�
equivalent to the output of about 44 big reactors—will be ord fuel dispenser ered by 2020. Areva, a French nuclear firm,
foresees 130 new plants by 2030.
There are several reasons for this optimism. The prices of rival power sources, including coal and natural
gas, have risen dramatically in recent years. At current levels, the IEA calculates, nuclear power is
cheaper than gas and almost as cheap as coal. Unlike such fossil fuels, which release climate-changing
carbon dioxide when burnt, nuclear power is “carbon free� Better yet, uranium comes from stable
countries such as Canada and Australia, so interruptions to supplies are unlikely. GE, Areva and another
rival, Westinghouse, are also touting new designs that they say are safer than existing nuclear plants.
Yet just one such reactor is under constr