
U103-B Filter
Materials:
Body: Aluminum(spray-painted)
Technical Specifications:
Working pressure:0.2Mpa
Filter accuracy:30um
Maximum flow rate:220L/min
Medium:gasoline,diesel
Features :
?96*142
M36*1.5
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U103-B 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.
esponsibility to steward the
earth and not a licence to abuse the creation of which we are a part.�Meanwhile, many big
companies, such as General Electric, now actively support greenery—not least because they think
they can make money out of it.
Could today s Republicans therefore take on the greenish hue of their predecessors? Perhaps not
immediately. Only 22 House Republicans and six Republican senators voted against last year s
unverdant energy bill. But there is still hope. One of the rebels was John McCain, a supporter of
carbon caps and an opponent of drilling in Alaska. Imagine a presidential contest in 2008 between
the Arizona senator and Hillary Clinton—and perhaps America s greens will no longer need to feel
quite so paranoid.
Selling public lands
Today s wood, tomorrow s spa
Feb 16th 2006 | DENVER
From The Economist print edition
The left s latest cause for rage
AMERICAN environmentalists could be forgiven for throwing up their hands and heading north.
This month Canada announced the creation of a 16m-acre conservation park along the Pacific
coast. Meanwhile, the Bush administration wants to sell some 300,000 acres of national forest
land in 35 states, mostly out west. That is about 0.2% of America s forest system—but it would be
the biggest such sale in living memory.
The proposal, which is in George Bush s budget, now goes to Congress (the public will also get a
chance to comment). The $800m or so in proceeds would go to support rural schools to make up
for the cash they used to get from timber sales on federal land. Environmentalists are beside
themselves. Suzanne Jones, a Colorado-based director of the Wilderness Society, accuses the
White House of selling off the public s land to balance the national budget. There are also howls
from Democrats, including Senator Dianne Feinstein of California and Montana s cowboyish
governor, Brian Schweitzer.
Auctioning off smaller bits of public land is common and (thanks to rising property prices)
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