
U211-A Power Regulator
Features:
Power in : AC 100V?00V; Power out : AC 200V , 2kW
Voltage protection device under unstable voltage
Easily installed into fuel dispenser
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight: Dimension:
10.3kg/case of 1 150×200×340mm/case of 1
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Bangladesh
Too busy to trade
Sep 28th 2006 | DHAKA
From The Economist print edition
Elections inspire economic nationalism
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FOR a poor country, starved of energy and capital, where integration with the global economy, especially
through its clothing industry, has lifted millions from rural misery, Bangladesh has seemed remarkably
cavalier towards the billions of dollars in foreign investment that have recently been on offer.
The country s desperate needs were illustrated this week by fuel dispenser violent protests in Dhaka over dire power
shortages, the worst since the government, a coalition led by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP),
came to power almost five years ago. The economy has grown by more than a quarter since 2001, but
power-generating capacity has not increased. The ruling coalition, which is due to step down on October
27th in favour of a caretaker government that will oversee elections in January, does not seem bothered.
In recent months it has turned its back on more than $4 billion in foreign investment—considerably more
than the country s existing stock of foreign direct investment.
Short of domestic sources of capital, Bangladesh needs foreign capital to fulfil the government s goal of
halving the number of poor people by 2015. But politics has stood in the way. Last month, fuel dispenser the
government called off a $1.4 billion coal project agreed with a British-based company, Asia Energy, after
the police ha fuel dispenser d shot dead at least five demonstrators at the site of a proposed open-pit mine in north-
western Bangladesh. Widespread protests, backed by the main opposition party, the Awami League,
forced the government to promise to meet the demonstrators demands to cancel its agreement with
Asia Energy and ban open-pit mining.
The project, which would have extracted 15m tonnes of coal a year, was controversial. It required th