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Indonesia

Imported Inorganic Chemical Elements, Oxides and Halogen Salts in Indonesia, [Pg.59]

Country of Origin Rank Value (000 US ) % Share Cumulative % [Pg.59]

Source Philip M. PARKER, Professor, INSEAD, copyright 2002, www.icongrounonline.com [Pg.59]


Other deposits are found in New Caledonia, Australia, Cuba, Indonesia, and elsewhere. [Pg.67]

Tin is found chiefly in cassiterite (Sn02). Most of the world s supply comes from Malaya, Bolivia, Indonesia, Zaire, Thailand, and Nigeria. The U.S. produces almost none, although occurrences have been found in Alaska and California. Tin is obtained by reducing the ore with coal in a reverberatory furnace. [Pg.118]

Double bonds are accommodated by rings of all sizes The smallest cycloalkene cyclo propene was first synthesized m 1922 A cyclopropene nng is present m sterculic acid a substance derived from one of the components of the oil present m the seeds of a tree (Sterculia foelida) that grows m the Philippines and Indonesia... [Pg.200]

Worldwide furfuryl alcohol capacity in 1993 was estimated to be 110,000 metric tons (38). As with furfural, new capacity in developing countries is replacing older capacity in developed countries. China and South Africa have become significant producers of furfuryl alcohol. New plants have been built in Asia and Indonesia as well. Consumption of furfuryl alcohol is spread over the globe the largest use is in the foundry industry which is increasingly moving away from heavily industrialized countries. [Pg.80]

Chlorine cannot be stored economically or moved long distances. International movements of bulk chlorine are more or less limited to movements between Canada and the United States. In 1987, chlorine moved in the form of derivatives was 3.3 million metric tons or approximately 10% of total consumption (3). Exports of ethylene dichloride, vinyl chloride monomer, poly(vinyl chloride), propylene oxide, and chlorinated solvents comprise the majority of world chlorine movement. Countries or areas with a chlorine surplus exported in the form of derivatives include Western Europe, Bra2il, USA, Saudi Arabia, and Canada. Countries with a chlorine deficit are Taiwan, Korea, Indonesia, Vene2uela, South Africa, Thailand and Japan (3). [Pg.478]

Direct Application Rock. Finely ground phosphate rock has had limited use as a direct-appHcation fertilizer for many years. There have been widely varying results. Direct appHcation of phosphate rock worldwide amounts to about 8% of total fertilizer phosphate used, primarily in the former Soviet Union, France, Brazil, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, and Indonesia. The agronomic effectiveness of an apatitic rock depends not only on the fineness of the grind but also strongly on the innate reactivity of the rock and the acidity of the sod performance is better on more acid sods. Probably more than half of the potentially productive tropical sods are acidic, some with pH as low as 3.5—4.5. Certain phosphate rocks may thus become increasingly important as fertilizer in those areas. The International Fertilizer Development Center at Muscle Shoals, Alabama is active in researching this field (30). [Pg.223]

In the Philippines, the principal suppHer of abaca fiber, the fibrous layer ia the sheath is separated with a knife between the layers, and the strips of fiber-containing layers, called tuxies, are pulled off and cleaned by hand to remove the pulp. In Indonesia and Central America these operations are performed mechanically. Hand- and spiadle-stripped fiber is graded for braids, fine textiles, and cordage decorticated fiber is another class. A cross-sectional view is shown ia Figure 4a. The abaca fiber has a large lumen and the presence of siUcified plates is not unusual. [Pg.362]

Sisal. The tme sisal fiber Fora Agave sisalana is the most important of the leaf fibers ia terms of quahty and commercial use. Originating ia the tropical western hemisphere, sisal has beea transplanted to East Africa, Indonesia, and the Philippines. It is named after the port ia the Yucatan from which it was first exported. [Pg.362]

The annual United States import of vanilla beans jumped 34% in 1991, as importers and users replenished inventories (7). Indonesia was the largest suppher, accounting for 47% of the total the lower price for Indonesian beans is responsible for the increase in shipments. Users have been replacing Bourbon beans with Indonesian types, or blending in Indonesian beans, because they may still label their product as natural and meet other EDA specifications. [Pg.25]

Other botanical varieties are caUed cassia, but the leaves of these varieties differ in flavor components from those of the bark. Saigon cinnamon, C. loureirii Nees, from Viet Nam, closely resembles Chinese cassia in appearance but is grown on the other side of the mountains and has an entirely different flavor character, containing no orthomethoxy cinnamic aldehyde. C. burmani B/ume, ie, Korintje or Kerintje cinnamon and Padang or Batavia cinnamon, is from Sumatra and Indonesia. C. sintok B/ume is native to Malaysia and of minor commercial importance. [Pg.28]

The spice from Saigon and Indonesia is sold in the form of quUls somewhat the same as the tme Ceylon cinnamon but rougher in appearance. The Saigon and Indonesian barks have a higher oil content with a different flavor character than the Ceylon type. [Pg.28]

Sesame Seed (Benne, Benni, Bene Seed). Sesame seed is the whole dried seed of Sesamum indicum L. (PedaUaceae), an annual plant now cultivated in Mexico and Central America, although indigenous to Indonesia and tropical Africa. It may be the oldest condiment known. The seed is small, shiny, and oval shaped, about 0.32 cm long. The unhuUed seeds are dark and the hulled seeds are pearly white. Sesame seeds, when baked, have a pleasant, roasted, nutty flavor. They are used in baked goods and in confections, eg, halvah. [Pg.29]

Vanilla. Vanilla is the dried, cured, fuU-sized, but not fully ripe fmit pods (beans) of Vanillaplanifolia And. and V. tahitensis J. W. Moore (Orchidaceae). The vine is native to the tropical rain forests of southern Mexico, Central America, the West Indies, and northern South America. Plantings were started in Madagascar, Reunion, Java, Mauritius, and Zanzibar in 1840. The Madagascar-type bean is stUl the most important, but Indonesia produces more than Malagasy. The stmcture of the flower prevents self-pollination and therefore, where insects are not prevalent, hand pollination is necessary. [Pg.30]

PT Langgeng Kimindo Pratama Karawang, West Java, Indonesia 40,000 ... [Pg.514]

Cyclohexane is present in all cmde oils in concentrations of 0.1—1.0%. The cycloparaffinic cmde oils, such as those from Nigeria and Venezuela, have high cyclohexane concentrations, and the highly paraffinic cmde oils, such as those from Indonesia. Saudi Arabia, and Pennsylvania, have low concentrations and concentrations of cycloparaffins in cmde oils from Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana tend to fall in between (see Petroleum). [Pg.407]

Represents the combined totals of Burma, Egypt, Greece, Indonesia, Italy (from wastes), Japan, the Philippines, Thailand, Turkey, and Zambia. ... [Pg.488]


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Census Indonesia

Education Indonesia

Elections: Indonesia

Experimental and theoretical activities in Indonesia

From Universal to Targeted Distribution, India and Indonesia

Ginger China, India, Indonesia

Incidence of Diesel, Gasoline, and Kerosene Subsidies, Indonesia

Indonesia Information Office

Indonesia cash transfer program

Indonesia clinical trials

Indonesia equation

Indonesia ginger rhizomes

Indonesia health centres

Indonesia identity

Indonesia language

Indonesia oleoresins

Indonesia pharmaceutical industry

Indonesia rhizomes

Indonesia subsidy programs

Indonesia, Mahakam Delta

Indonesia, associations

Indonesia, confrontation with

Indonesia, elements

N in B, Indonesia

Persistent Toxic Substances in the Environment of Indonesia

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