Factory List September 2020 Liste Der Fabriken September 2020 Liste Des
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REVISIONS Suzhou Talesun Solar Technologies Co., Ltd
REVISIONS SuZhou Talesun Solar Technologies Co., Ltd. REV ECN / NPA DESCRIPTION OF CHANGE CHK’D/DATE APP’D/DATE TITLE: LIMITED WARRANTY CERTIFICATE FOR TALESUN A0 07-2020 New Edition Caiping.huang Zhenzhou.gao 07-2020 07-2020 DOUBLE GLASS PHOTOVOLTAIC MODULE SPEC. NO.: PART NO.: TS-ET-125 N/A DRAWN BY: REV: Yujie.qian A0 SHEET 1 OF 1 TECHNICAL SPECIFICATION TITLE: LIMITED WARRANTY CERTIFICATE FOR SPEC. NO.: TS-ET-125 TALESUN DOUBLE GLASS PHOTOVOLTAIC REVISION: A0 MODULE EFFECTIVE DATE: 07-2020 Page 1 of 8 SuZhou Talesun Solar Technologies Co., Ltd. (“TALESUN”), hereby provide the limited warranty as below(“Limited Warranty”) described below to the initial owner of such Modules (the “Buyer”) This Limited Warranty applies exclusively to the new modules purchased from Talesun TALESUN reserve the right to amend the terms of this Limited Warranty as needed from time to time. Modules are defined in this Limited Warranty as photovoltaic solar modules manufactured by TALESUN or its authorized manufacturers, legitimately bearing “Talesun” brand, that are of the following product types: TD654P-XXX/TD654P-XXXN;TD660P-XXX/TD660P-XXXN;TD660M-XXX/TD660M-XXXN; TD672P-XXX/TD672P-XXXN;TD672M-XXX/TD672M-XXXN;TD6D60M-XXX;TD6D72M- XXX;TD6E60M-XXX/TD6E60M-XXXN ;TD6E72M-XXX/TD6E72M-XXXN ;TD6G72M-XXX ; TD6G60M-XXX;TDI72M-XXX;TD6I60M-XXX Note: M-Mono Module, P-Poly Module, The first D stands for double glass The second D-N type bifacial module E-P type bifacial module G-stand for half cutting module(9bb bifacial) I- stand for half cutting module(166 9bb bifacial) N-stand for none frame,The product model includes but is not limited to the above model and shall be subject to the specific model purchased by the customer. -
Research for Policy Development : Industrial Clusters in South China
CHAPTER 3 Research for policy development: Industrial clusters in South China1 Rigas Arvanitis and Qiu Haixiong Abstract This research study analyses the development of industrial clusters in three institutional contexts in South China to better understand how policies have been developed and implemented to encourage innovation. The authors trace the growth of private enterprises within these clusters, and note that this growth was assisted by local governments and by links with foreign companies, which were instrumental in upgrading networks of suppliers and bringing in foreign expertise. The research shows that innovation centres have begun to create networks of enterprises, improve innovation capacities, and enhance communication with universities and research centres. In some districts, local government policy has promoted innovation centres, especially during diffi cult economic times, when a need for better quality and higher priced products made sense in China. As such, the innovation centres were mainly oriented toward servicing the local industry, rather than maintaining a competitive edge. The research team concludes that ‘marketized’ research centres have a greater probability of success than innovation centres because they base decisions on selling products. Since 1999, China has actively promoted innovation policy to reinforce the technological capabilities of smaller fi rms, while continuing to promote larger multinational fi rms. At the same time, public research centres have undergone rapid ‘marketization’,2 which has transformed many former public engineering research centres into enterprises. It is much too early to assess this strategy, but the speed with which private fi rms and collective enterprises have acquired, adapted and promoted new products, and new productive processes, is remarkable. -
Appendix 1: Rank of China's 338 Prefecture-Level Cities
Appendix 1: Rank of China’s 338 Prefecture-Level Cities © The Author(s) 2018 149 Y. Zheng, K. Deng, State Failure and Distorted Urbanisation in Post-Mao’s China, 1993–2012, Palgrave Studies in Economic History, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-92168-6 150 First-tier cities (4) Beijing Shanghai Guangzhou Shenzhen First-tier cities-to-be (15) Chengdu Hangzhou Wuhan Nanjing Chongqing Tianjin Suzhou苏州 Appendix Rank 1: of China’s 338 Prefecture-Level Cities Xi’an Changsha Shenyang Qingdao Zhengzhou Dalian Dongguan Ningbo Second-tier cities (30) Xiamen Fuzhou福州 Wuxi Hefei Kunming Harbin Jinan Foshan Changchun Wenzhou Shijiazhuang Nanning Changzhou Quanzhou Nanchang Guiyang Taiyuan Jinhua Zhuhai Huizhou Xuzhou Yantai Jiaxing Nantong Urumqi Shaoxing Zhongshan Taizhou Lanzhou Haikou Third-tier cities (70) Weifang Baoding Zhenjiang Yangzhou Guilin Tangshan Sanya Huhehot Langfang Luoyang Weihai Yangcheng Linyi Jiangmen Taizhou Zhangzhou Handan Jining Wuhu Zibo Yinchuan Liuzhou Mianyang Zhanjiang Anshan Huzhou Shantou Nanping Ganzhou Daqing Yichang Baotou Xianyang Qinhuangdao Lianyungang Zhuzhou Putian Jilin Huai’an Zhaoqing Ningde Hengyang Dandong Lijiang Jieyang Sanming Zhoushan Xiaogan Qiqihar Jiujiang Longyan Cangzhou Fushun Xiangyang Shangrao Yingkou Bengbu Lishui Yueyang Qingyuan Jingzhou Taian Quzhou Panjin Dongying Nanyang Ma’anshan Nanchong Xining Yanbian prefecture Fourth-tier cities (90) Leshan Xiangtan Zunyi Suqian Xinxiang Xinyang Chuzhou Jinzhou Chaozhou Huanggang Kaifeng Deyang Dezhou Meizhou Ordos Xingtai Maoming Jingdezhen Shaoguan -
Rugao and Water Garden in Seventeenth Century China Yingzhi
Rugao and Water Garden in Seventeenth Century China Yingzhi Zhao, The City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong The IAFOR International Conference on the City 2016 Official Conference Proceedings Abstract My paper focuses on Rugao, a city on the northern bank of the Yangtze River, during the fall of the Ming dynasty and the consolidation of Qing rule in the mid and late seventeenth century. The unique status of Rugao was due to its location in one of the most prosperous and cultivated areas of China, as well as the area that suffered greatly in the war and violence during the dynastic transition. It also had the reputation of a literary city, thanks to a local writer Mao Xiao (1611-1693) and his estate, the Water Garden. Mao’s estate became ruins after the conquest, but it was a heaven for Mao and his politically marginalized friends, as the old sites on the ruins symbolized their aesthetics and sensibility. One such site was the Tree-Nest, a pavilion, built on an old tree beside a river. The Tree-Nest showed Mao’s attempt to emulate the ancients’ simple life, but it was also in tune with the Ming literati’s interest in strangeness and artfulness. Only when the pavilion collapsed and the tree alone was left after the conquest did the Tree-Nest recover its original significance and invite Mao and his friends to contemplate what it meant to live on a tree while no place was left for them in the world. By examining how the estate obtained new meanings, I will explore how the city survived the destruction, how destruction led to reconstruction, and how the literati culture of the Ming was commemorated. -
Printmgr File
THIS DOCUMENT IS IN DRAFT FORM, INCOMPLETE AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE. THE INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT MUST BE READ IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE SECTION HEADED “WARNING” ON THE COVER OF THIS DOCUMENT. SUMMARY This summary is intended to give you an overview of the information contained in this document. Since it is a summary, it does not contain all the information that may be important to you. You should read this document in its entirety before you decide whether to invest in the [REDACTED]. OVERVIEW We are a leading large-scale private higher education and vocational education group in South China, offering applied science-focused and practice-oriented programs. As of October 31, 2019, we had an aggregate of 40,627 students enrolled at our three schools, namely Huali College, Huali Vocational College and Huali Technician College. According to the Frost & Sullivan Report, by the end of 2018, as measured by student enrollment, we ranked second among all private vocational education service providers in South China and ranked fourth among all private higher education service providers in South China. Our schools offer private higher education and private vocational education in a wide range of fields in applied sciences with an aim to prepare our students with the necessary knowledge base, skill sets and accreditations to secure jobs and pursue careers in particular professions, trades and industries. We have designed our curricula with a distinct emphasis on practical, job-oriented content for a variety of majors that are in demand by potential employers in the Pearl River Delta. We conduct employer surveys and on-going research on industry trends and market demand and seek to continuously improve our major offerings and curricula to respond to the changing needs of the job markets. -
SGS-Safeguards 04910- Minimum Wages Increased in Jiangsu -EN-10
SAFEGUARDS SGS CONSUMER TESTING SERVICES CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIILITY SOLUTIONS NO. 049/10 MARCH 2010 MINIMUM WAGES INCREASED IN JIANGSU Jiangsu becomes the first province to raise minimum wages in China in 2010, with an average increase of over 12% effective from 1 February 2010. Since 2008, many local governments have deferred the plan of adjusting minimum wages due to the financial crisis. As economic results are improving, the government of Jiangsu Province has decided to raise the minimum wages. On January 23, 2010, the Department of Human Resources and Social Security of Jiangsu Province declared that the minimum wages in Jiangsu Province would be increased from February 1, 2010 according to Interim Provisions on Minimum Wages of Enterprises in Jiangsu Province and Minimum Wages Standard issued by the central government. Adjustment of minimum wages in Jiangsu Province The minimum wages do not include: Adjusted minimum wages: • Overtime payment; • Monthly minimum wages: • Allowances given for the Areas under the first category (please refer to the table on next page): middle shift, night shift, and 960 yuan/month; work in particular environments Areas under the second category: 790 yuan/month; such as high or low Areas under the third category: 670 yuan/month temperature, underground • Hourly minimum wages: operations, toxicity and other Areas under the first category: 7.8 yuan/hour; potentially harmful Areas under the second category: 6.4 yuan/hour; environments; Areas under the third category: 5.4 yuan/hour. • The welfare prescribed in the laws and regulations. CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIILITY SOLUTIONS NO. 049/10 MARCH 2010 P.2 Hourly minimum wages are calculated on the basis of the announced monthly minimum wages, taking into account: • The basic pension insurance premiums and the basic medical insurance premiums that shall be paid by the employers. -
Jiangsu(PDF/288KB)
Mizuho Bank China Business Promotion Division Jiangsu Province Overview Abbreviated Name Su Provincial Capital Nanjing Administrative 13 cities and 45 counties Divisions Secretary of the Luo Zhijun; Provincial Party Li Xueyong Committee; Mayor 2 Size 102,600 km Shandong Annual Mean 16.2°C Jiangsu Temperature Anhui Shanghai Annual Precipitation 861.9 mm Zhejiang Official Government www.jiangsu.gov.cn URL Note: Personnel information as of September 2014 [Economic Scale] Unit 2012 2013 National Share (%) Ranking Gross Domestic Product (GDP) 100 Million RMB 54,058 59,162 2 10.4 Per Capita GDP RMB 68,347 74,607 4 - Value-added Industrial Output (enterprises above a designated 100 Million RMB N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. size) Agriculture, Forestry and Fishery 100 Million RMB 5,809 6,158 3 6.3 Output Total Investment in Fixed Assets 100 Million RMB 30,854 36,373 2 8.2 Fiscal Revenue 100 Million RMB 5,861 6,568 2 5.1 Fiscal Expenditure 100 Million RMB 7,028 7,798 2 5.6 Total Retail Sales of Consumer 100 Million RMB 18,331 20,797 3 8.7 Goods Foreign Currency Revenue from Million USD 6,300 2,380 10 4.6 Inbound Tourism Export Value Million USD 328,524 328,857 2 14.9 Import Value Million USD 219,438 221,987 4 11.4 Export Surplus Million USD 109,086 106,870 3 16.3 Total Import and Export Value Million USD 547,961 550,844 2 13.2 Foreign Direct Investment No. of contracts 4,156 3,453 N.A. -
Complicated HCV Subtype Expansion Among Drug Users in Guangdong
Infection, Genetics and Evolution 73 (2019) 139–145 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Infection, Genetics and Evolution journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/meegid Research paper Complicated HCV subtype expansion among drug users in Guangdong province, China T ⁎ Jin Yana, , Xiao-Bing Fua, Ping-Ping Zhoub, Xiang Heb, Jun Liua, Xu-He Huangb, Guo-Long Yua, Xin-Ge Yana, Jian-Rong Lia, Yan Lia, Peng Lina a Guangdong Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 160 Qunxian Road, Panyu District, Guangzhou 511430, Guangdong, China b Guangdong Provincial Institute of Public Health, Guangdong Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 160 Qunxian Road, Panyu District, Guangzhou 511430, Guangdong, China ARTICLE INFO ABSTRACT Keywords: Guangdong Province is one of the most developed and populous provinces in southern China. The subtype HCV situation of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in Guangdong remains unknown. The aim of this study was to investigate Subtype and estimate the HCV subtypes in drug users (DU) using a city-based sampling strategy to better understand the Drug users characteristics of HCV transmission in Guangdong. Archived plasma samples (n = 1074) from DU who were Molecular epidemiology anti-HCV positive in 2014 were selected randomly from 20 cities in Guangdong Province. Subtypes were de- Guangdong termined based on core and/or E1 sequences using phylogenetic analysis. The distributions of HCV subtypes in DU and different regions were analyzed. A total of 8 genotypes were identified. The three main HCV subtypes in DU in Guangdong were 6a (63.0%), 3a (15.2%), and 3b (11.8%). Significant differences were discovered among different registered residency and regions but not among genders, marital status, education level, or drug use patterns. -
Area/Temperature Limitation to Application of Vetiver System in China
Adequate Areas in China for the Application of Vetiver System Liyu XU (China Vetiver Network, Nanjing 210008) Abstract: Vetiver System was introduced into China by Mr. Grimshaw from the World Bank in 1988. Beginning from the Fuzhou Symposium in 1997, the system was applied for infrastructure protection in China. Since the Nanchang Symposium in 1999, it was extended quickly countrywide, and in particular, it was extensively applied and extended in South China. On the basis of reviewing successful research cases all over China, this paper deals with adequate areas where vetiver grasses can be planted, and lists related issues that should be further studied in the future. Key words: Vetiver system, Slope protection, Adequate planting area Environment protection is one of the most urgent missions faced by the contemporary world and also one of the basic tasks faced by the Chinese people in their economical construction and social development. Therefore, it should be considered as a basic state policy to be adhered in a long historic period. In its broad sense, environment protection consists of two fields, i.e., soil and water conservation as well as pollution control. To practice environment protection, various measures may be adopted. However, among those measures, bioengineering technology has been becoming favorite one frequently adopted by more and more people in recent years. Vetiver (Vetiveria zizanioides) is characterized by its strong stress tolerance, wide adoptability, quick growing vitality, huge biomass, highly developed root system with fantastic mechanical properties, and powerful soil bounding capacity as well as is to be easily planted and simply managed at very low cost. -
Exploration of Low-Carbon Rural Tourism in Zhejiang::A Case Study of Lu Ci Cun, Tonglu County
International Forum on Energy, Environment Science and Materials (IFEESM 2015) Exploration of low-carbon rural tourism in Zhejiang::A Case Study of lu Ci Cun, Tonglu County Hu Jianqiang 1,2,a, Lou Chuyuan 1,b ,and Wang Junjie 1,c 1School of Modern Service, Zhejiang Shuren University, Hangzhou, 310015, China; 2The Research Center of modern service industry of Zhejiang Province, Hangzhou, 310015, China aemail:[email protected], bemail:[email protected], cemail:Junjie @163.com KEYWORDS: Low carbon Tourism; Low carbon economy; Rural tourism; Lu Ci Cun ABSTRACT: Along with the advancement of the construction of ecological civilization, low-carbon economy and low-carbon tourism are increasingly affecting the production and life style of human beings. Low carbon tourism is in the process of tourism development, through the use of low-carbon technologies, promote carbon absorbing mechanism and advocate low carbon tourism consumption to obtain higher tourism experience quality and greater tourism economic, social and environmental benefits of a sustainable development of tourism in new ways . Low carbon has become a recognized future development direction of the tourism industry. Closely linked to this paper, vigorously develop low carbon tourism industry requirements, to Tonglu, Zhejiang Lu Ci Cun, for example, through on-the-spot investigation, the problems existed in the village rural tourism low carbon analysis, and put forward the corresponding countermeasures, in order to rural tourism and low-carbon development in our province to find a feasible and with a demonstration of the significance of the road, and for other areas to carry out low carbon tourism experience. INTRODUCTION Rural tourism is based on the farmers' family management, with the characteristics of rural scenery and rural interest, in order to experience the main content of rural life as the main content of leisure travel [1]. -
Habitat Specialisation in the Reed Parrotbill Paradoxornis Heudei Evidence from Its Distribution and Habitat
FORKTAIL 29 (2013): 64–70 Habitat specialisation in the Reed Parrotbill Paradoxornis heudei—evidence from its distribution and habitat use LI-HU XIONG & JIAN-JIAN LU The Reed Parrotbill Paradoxornis heudei is found in habitats dominated by Common Reed Phragmites australis in East Asia. This project was designed to test whether the Reed Parrotbill is a specialist of reed-dominated habitats, using data collected through literature review and field observations. About 87% of academic publications describing Reed Parrotbill habitat report an association with reeds, and the species was recorded in reeds at 92% of sites where it occurred. On Chongming Island, birds were only recorded in transects covered with reeds or transects with scattered reeds close to large reedbeds. At the Chongxi Wetland Research Centre, monthly monitoring over three years also showed that the species was not recorded in habitats without reeds. The density of Reed Parrotbills was higher in reedbeds than mixed vegetation (reeds with planted trees) and small patches of reeds. The species rarely appeared in mixed habitat after reeds disappeared. These results confirm that the species is a reed specialist and highlights that conservation of reed-dominated habitat is a precondition to conserve the Reed Parrotbill. INTRODUCTION METHODS Habitat specialisation results in some species having a close Three sets of information on Reed Parrotbill distribution and relationship with only a few habitat types (Futuyma & Moreno habitat use were used: (1) distribution and habitat use data in the 1988), and habitat specialists have some specific life-history Chinese part of its range, collated from academic publications, web characteristics, for example, they often have weak dispersal abilities news, communication with birdwatchers and personal (Krauss et al. -
Shop Direct Factory List Dec 18
Factory Factory Address Country Sector FTE No. workers % Male % Female ESSENTIAL CLOTHING LTD Akulichala, Sakashhor, Maddha Para, Kaliakor, Gazipur, Bangladesh BANGLADESH Garments 669 55% 45% NANTONG AIKE GARMENTS COMPANY LTD Group 14, Huanchi Village, Jiangan Town, Rugao City, Jaingsu Province, China CHINA Garments 159 22% 78% DEEKAY KNITWEARS LTD SF No. 229, Karaipudhur, Arulpuram, Palladam Road, Tirupur, 641605, Tamil Nadu, India INDIA Garments 129 57% 43% HD4U No. 8, Yijiang Road, Lianhang Economic Development Zone, Haining CHINA Home Textiles 98 45% 55% AIRSPRUNG BEDS LTD Canal Road, Canal Road Industrial Estate, Trowbridge, Wiltshire, BA14 8RQ, United Kingdom UK Furniture 398 83% 17% ASIAN LEATHERS LIMITED Asian House, E. M. Bypass, Kasba, Kolkata, 700017, India INDIA Accessories 978 77% 23% AMAN KNITTINGS LIMITED Nazimnagar, Hemayetpur, Savar, Dhaka, Bangladesh BANGLADESH Garments 1708 60% 30% V K FASHION LTD formerly STYLEWISE LTD Unit 5, 99 Bridge Road, Leicester, LE5 3LD, United Kingdom UK Garments 51 43% 57% AMAN GRAPHIC & DESIGN LTD. Najim Nagar, Hemayetpur, Savar, Dhaka, Bangladesh BANGLADESH Garments 3260 40% 60% WENZHOU SUNRISE INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD. Floor 2, 1 Building Qiangqiang Group, Shanghui Industrial Zone, Louqiao Street, Ouhai, Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province, China CHINA Accessories 716 58% 42% AMAZING EXPORTS CORPORATION - UNIT I Sf No. 105, Valayankadu, P. Vadugapal Ayam Post, Dharapuram Road, Palladam, 541664, India INDIA Garments 490 53% 47% ANDRA JEWELS LTD 7 Clive Avenue, Hastings, East Sussex, TN35 5LD, United Kingdom UK Accessories 68 CAVENDISH UPHOLSTERY LIMITED Mayfield Mill, Briercliffe Road, Chorley Lancashire PR6 0DA, United Kingdom UK Furniture 33 66% 34% FUZHOU BEST ART & CRAFTS CO., LTD No. 3 Building, Lifu Plastic, Nanshanyang Industrial Zone, Baisha Town, Minhou, Fuzhou, China CHINA Homewares 44 41% 59% HUAHONG HOLDING GROUP No.