
U203-E Display
This device is mainly applied in the system of dispenser to remove the solid sedimentation is the oil ,ensuring the cleaning of the oil or like ,and as a result to extend the life span and accuracy of the flow meter. In the system of dispenser ,it is fixed between the oil pump and the flow meter.
Materials:
Body: Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Seals: Buna-N
Technical Specifications:
Working pressure:0.2Mpa
Filter accuracy:30um
Flow Rate:65L/min
Rating Medium:Gasoline,Kerosene, Diesel
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U103-A 2kg/case of1 2.2kg/case of1 20x13x14cm/case of1
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.
their ways. International banks, at any rate, are
beginning to grasp the risks of relationships with poorly regulated forestry firms. In 2001, ABN AMRO, a Dutch
bank, declared that it would not “finance companies or projects that are involved in, collude with or purchase
timber from illegal logging operations.�More recently, HSBC and Citibank have both pledged not to lend to illegal
loggers. Dozens of other big banks subscribe to the Equator Principles, which commit them to lending only to
environmentally minded projects. Considering that foreign banks lent $7 billion to Indonesian forestry firms before
the Asian crisis of 1997, these worthy promises could have a real impact.
Banks might also bear in mind that companies that are cavalier about their environmental responsibilities often
prove lax when it comes to their fiduciary ones too. The forestry and paper industries accounted for one-quarter of
the bad debts acquired by the Indonesian government when it took over failed banks in the wake of the Asian
crisis. It ended up writing off roughly 70% of the value of these loans. One company alone, Asia Pulp and Paper,
racked up $14 billion in bad debts. It is still bickering with its creditors to this day.
But those who want to do business only with blameless logging firms will have trouble finding any. Foreign donors
and NGOs helping to rebuild Aceh province after the devastating tsunami of 2004, for example, undertook to use
only legal wood. But s fuel dispenser ince Indonesian forestry laws are so laxly enforced, and paperwork so widely forged, they
could not tell good wood from bad. Indeed, one of the problems hindering prosecutions of illegal loggers in
Indonesia is the lack of a clear definition of legal wood. Britain s Department for International Development is
currently helping the government to draft such a standard. In the meantime, the donors are importing mos fuel dispenser t of
their wood from Australia and New Zealand.
Much the same problem afflicts wood-buyers around the world. In 2004, Greenpeace d fuel dispenser