
U104-A 3-phase Connection
This type of meter is used to fuel dispensers for measurement of pressurized oil.
Materials:
Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Package:
Net Weight:
1.7kg/case of 1
Gross Weight: 1.9kg/case of 1
Dimension: 36x15x15cm/case of 1
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
There will be no welcome mat for Bulgarian and Romanian workers
EPA
Turned away
WHEN the European Union expanded to the east in May 2004, Britain was the only large country to open
its labour market to workers from the eight new member states. Together with Ireland and Sweden, it
gave up the right to impose restrictions lasting up to seven years.
On October 24th, that open-door policy was slammed shut for Bulgaria and Romania, which are due to
join the EU in January 2007. John Reid, the home secretary, announced a battery of controls, which have
been designed to keep out all but a trickle of migrant work fuel dispenser ers from the union s two new fuel dispenser members.
fuel dispenser The policy reversal had been foreshadowed in August, when ministers started to drop the heaviest of
hints that Bulgaria and Romania would be treated differently. It followed an embarrassingly wrong
prediction the government had published about the likely migration from Poland and the other seven
countries that joined in 2004. This suggested that the net inflow of workers would be only 13,000 a year
until the end of the decade. However, figures published in August showed that 427,000 migrants from
eastern Europe had registered for work between May 2004 and June 2006. Allowing for the self-
employed took the true figure closer to 600,000 according to Tony McNulty, a Home Office minister.
The government s new controls are designed mainly to prevent low-skilled Romanians and Bulgarians
from working in Britain. Only 19,750 will be allowed to work in just two industries, agriculture and food
processing (and citizens from non-EU countries will no longer be allowed to work in those sectors). A
handful of highly-skilled workers will be welcome; and skilled migrants can be employed provided that
they get work permits. Students will be allowed to work part-time.
The open-door policy may have ended but it is an open question how effective