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Government Japanese

Market forces determine the demand for a product, and the demand will be used to forecast the sales of hydrocarbons. This will be one of the factors considered by some governments when setting the production targets for the oil company. For example, much of the gas produced in the South China Sea is liquefied and exported by tanker to Japan for industrial and domestic use the contract agreed with the Japanese purchaser will drive the production levels set by the National Oil Company. [Pg.346]

The Japanese Government initiated a program in 1992 to promote the development of PFFCs for both portable and stationary appHcations. The goal is to demonstrate a 1-kW module having a power density of 0.3 W/cm at a cell voltage greater than 0.75 V by 1995. A few research projects are under way in Japan. [Pg.586]

Calcium—zinc soaps are used in many PVC food container appHcations because these heat stabilizers are universally accepted as safe by the U.S. FDA, German BGA, Japanese JHPA, and other government regulatory groups. [Pg.551]

STRATEGY AND PROGRAM TOWARD DEVELOPING CUTTING-EDGE ANALYTICAL INSTRUMENTS AND DEVICES A NEW INITIATIVE BY JAPANESE GOVERNMENT... [Pg.23]

In 1942 the Japanese overran Malaya and the then Dutch East Indies to cut off the main sources of natural rubber for the United States and the British Commonwealth. Because of this the US Government initiated a crash programme for the installation of plants for the manufacture of a rubber from butadiene and styrene. This product, then known as GR-S (Government Rubber-Styrene), provided at that time an inferior substitute for natural rubber but, with a renewed availability of natural rubber at the end of the war, the demand for GR-S slumped considerably. (Today the demand for SBR (as GR-S is now known) has increased with the great improvements in quality that have been made and SBR is today the principal synthetic rubber). [Pg.425]

The Japanese are committed to vigorously developing and dominating the field of advanced ceramics. They have put in place a well-integrated national effort primarily based on government-industry interactions. [Pg.84]

The authors thank Professor Hiroshi Masuhara, Professor TsuyoshiAsahi, Professor Naoto Tamai, and Dr Lingyun Pan for collaboration and helpful discussion. This work was partly supported by Grant-in-Aids for Research in Priority Area (No. 432), from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) of the Japanese Government and CREST JST... [Pg.152]

Hiroshi Fukumura received his M.Sc and Ph.D. degrees from Tohoku University, Japan. He studied biocompatibility of polymers in the Government Industrial Research Institute of Osaka from 1983 to 1988. He became an assistant professor at Kyoto Institute of Technology in 1988, and then moved to the Department of Applied Physics, Osaka University in 1991, where he worked on the mechanism of laser ablation and laser molecular implantation. Since 1998, he is a professor in the Department of Chemistry at Tohoku University. He received the Award of the Japanese Photochemistry Association in 2000, and the Award for Creative Work from The Chemical Society Japan in 2005. His main research interest is the physical chemistry of organic molecules including polymeric materials studied with various kinds of time-resolved techniques and scanning probe microscopes. [Pg.335]

Hirabayashi, T. (1907) Report on the Kuroko deposits, 1. Government of Japan (in Japanese). [Pg.274]

Institut de Recherches de la Siderurgie, France International Organization for Standardization ISO Council Committee on Reference Materials International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry Laboratory of the Government Chemist, UK, formerly NPL National Bureau of Standards, USA, now NIST National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards, USA National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, UK Japanese National Institute for Environmental Studies National Institute of Occup. Health, Oslo, Norway National Institute of Standards and Technology, USA, formerly NBS,... [Pg.317]

In 1947, the Japanese government promulgated the Pesticide Registration Law (PRL) administered by the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry [now Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF)]. At that time, the purpose of this law was to control the quality of end-use pesticide products since there were many poor-quality and fake products in the market in the 1940s. [Pg.39]

In order to observe the decline of triphenyltin level in fish, The Environment Agency of the Japanese government collected fishes from 35 sites all over the Japanese coasts and carried out a survey of the triphenyltin concentration66. Experimental results are illustrated in Figure 6. [Pg.888]

This study was supported by Special Coordination Funds of the Science and Technology Agency of the Japanese Government as well as by Grant-in-Aid for Special Study 61123002. [Pg.223]

Despite Germany s surrender, Japan continued to resist the unconditional surrender demanded by the Allied Forces. Knowing that the U.S. would shortly have enriched uranium and plutonium bombs ready for use enabled Truman to avoid extending Japan an offer of surrender that allowed the Emperor to continue to rule. On July 26, 1945, the Potsdam Declaration was issued via radio to Japan. President Truman, Chiang Kai-Shek of Nationalist China, and Winston Churchill of Great Britain called on the Japanese government to proclaim now the unconditional surrender of all Japanese armed forces. The alternative for Japan is prompt and utter destruction. 4 Japanese leadership rejected the declaration on July 29, 1945. [Pg.36]

The Isolation Policy of Japan started from the beginning of the 17th century and ended in 1854 when four 5/ac directed by Commodore M. C. Peny (1794-1858) of USA visited Uraga, a small town near Yokohama in 1853 and concluded the Treaty of the Peace and Amity in Yokohama in 1854. The big Black Ships constmcted with iron, which can float on water, brought a big surprise to all Japanese, and Japanese Government had to open the country for trade and other exchanges to all foreign countries under the power of big cannons, which Japanese had never seen. Then, the Isolation Policy of Japan ended. [Pg.10]

Foreign Teachers of Science and Technology Employed by the Japanese Government at Modernization... [Pg.10]

Soon after the end of Tokugawa Period Edo Era), the new government under Mei/ i Emperor started in 1867. In the Meiji Era, Japanese Government intended to follow up the modem European culture, especially European science and technology, and established The Imperial University of Tokyo having Faculties of Law, Science, and Literature in 1868. This is the first university of Japan. [Pg.10]

Young Students Sent Abroad by the Japanese Government to Study Science and Technology at the Modernization... [Pg.11]


See other pages where Government Japanese is mentioned: [Pg.267]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.582]    [Pg.584]    [Pg.279]    [Pg.460]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.523]    [Pg.851]    [Pg.1180]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.810]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.279]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.558]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.10]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.36 ]




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