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Singapore Technologies

Consequently, in 2000, Singapore Technologies created three investment clubs, unofficially called Tortoise Clubs. The corporate human resources department tapped approximately thirty executives from various parts of ST and asked them to form three different venture investment clubs. The mission of each was to manage a fund that would invest in companies founded by ST staff. One was Neo Kok Beng, an engineer who joined Singapore Technologies computer subsidiary and had worked in a variety of technical and business development positions. He comments ... [Pg.182]

Having established a basic investment framework, the Incubators Work team developed a five-year implementation schedule, broken into four phases. First, the team planned to spend two years creating entrepreneurial awareness within Singapore Technologies. It used corporate newsletters and events to publicize Incubators Worki ... [Pg.183]

One of the key choices Singapore Technologies made was to fund three different entities deliberately designed to be different from one another demographically, so that each would tap into a different social network. Each club was allowed to establish its own policies and was not asked to coordinate with the others, to promote diverse approaches. Incubators Work chose to take a minority stake in ventures that would be incubated outside the parent, but it could have selected different policies had it wished. Its purpose was to... [Pg.188]

Because of projected nylon-6,6 growth of 4—10% (167) per year in the Far East, several companies have announced plans for that area. A Rhc ne-Poulenc/Oriental Chemical Industry joint venture (Kofran) announced a 1991 startup for a 50,000-t/yr plant in Onsan, South Korea (168,169). Asahi announced plans for a 15,000-t/yr expansion of adipic acid capacity at their Nobeoka complex in late 1989, accompanied by a 60,000-t/yr cyclohexanol plant at Mizushima based on their new cyclohexene hydration technology (170). In early 1990 the Du Pont Company announced plans for a major nylon-6,6 complex for Singapore, including a 90,000-t/yr adipic acid plant due to start up in 1993 (167). Plans or negotiations for other adipic acid capacity in the area include Formosa Plastics (Taiwan) (171) and BASF-Hyundai Petrochemical (South Korea) (167). Adipic acid is a truly worldwide... [Pg.245]

S. Yurchak and S. S. Wong, "Mobil Methanol Conversion Technology," Proceedings IGT Asian Natural Gas Seminar, Singapore, 1992, pp. 593—618. [Pg.100]

R. Reisfeld, in B. Jezowska-Trzebiatowska, J. Legendziewicz, and W. Strk, eds., the 1 st International Symposium on Rare Earth Technology, World Scientific, Singapore, 1985. [Pg.293]

Puranik, S. A., K. K. Hathi, and R. Sengupta (1990). Prevention of Hazards Through Technological Alternatives. Safety and Loss Prevention in the Chemical and Oil Processing Industries, Qctober 23-27,1989, Singapore, 581-587. IChemE Symposium Series, No. 120. Rugby, Warwickshire, U. K. The Institution of Chemical Engineers. [Pg.143]

Kim Chwee Daniel Tan Naryang Technological University, Naryang Avenue, Singapore, daniel.tan nie.edu.sg... [Pg.1]

Lian Sai Chia Nanyang Technological University, Nanyang Avenue, Singapore... [Pg.377]

This work was supported by the grant R-263-000-266-305 from the Agency for Science, Technology, and Research in Singapore. [Pg.76]

This work is supported in part by the Ministry of Education and Agency for Science and Technology Research, Republic of Singapore. M. A. C. gratefully acknowledges computational resources provided by the Australian University Supercomputer Facility and the Australian Partnership for Advanced Computing. [Pg.460]

Kim Kinoshita, Electrochemical oxygen technology, John Willey Sons, Inc. New York, Chichester, Brisbane, Toronto, Singapore. [Pg.136]

Hua Dong, School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering, 70 Nanyang Drive, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 637457... [Pg.18]

TJ Nelson and JR Wullert III, Electronic Information Display Technologies, World Scientific Publishing Company, Singapore, 1997. [Pg.475]

P. Zeng, Y. B. Yin, M. Bilek and D. McKenzie, 2nd International Conference on Advances of Thin Films and Coating Technology, Singapore, 2004, p. 202... [Pg.223]

Guisnet, M. Gilson, J. P. (Eds.) Zeolites for Cleaner Technologies, Imperial College Press, Singapore, 2002. [Pg.248]

Liebner, W. (2005) Gas to propylene, GTP/MTP technology. Presented at Propylene Trade Derivatives Markets, Singapore, October 24-25. [Pg.533]


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