Betekenis van:
electronics industry

electronics industry
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • the manufacturers of electronic products considered collectively

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. The main topics covered are pneumatics, robotics, programmable logic control, electricity and electronics, cost management, social skills, management techniques, bodywork, painting, and car industry-specific software.
    2. The cooperating users were producers of semi-finished products which were further used in various industry sectors, such as automotive and electronics.
    3. The resulting composite materials (glass fibre reinforced plastics) are used in a large number of industries: automotive industry, electric/electronics, wind mill blades, building/construction, tanks/pipes, consumer goods, aerospace/military, etc.
    4. Industry-relevant priorities and their integration for sectoral applications can be established through activities like the European Technology Platforms in fields such as nano-electronics, manufacturing, power generation, steel, chemistry, energy, the transport industry, construction, industrial safety, textiles, ceramics, forest-based industry and nano-medicine. This will help establish common research priorities and targets.
    5. Industry-relevant priorities and their integration for sectoral applications can be established through activities like the European Technology Platforms in fields such as nano-electronics, manufacturing, power generation, steel, chemistry, energy, the transport industry, construction, industrial safety, textiles, ceramics, forest-based industry and nano-medicine.
    6. Other uses are in textile bleaching, disinfection in the foods processing industry, etching in the electronics industry, metal plating, degrading of proteins, tooth bleaching, professional hair dyeing and bleaching, treatment of drinking water and waste water, in numerous consumer products for hair dyeing and bleaching, household textile bleaching products, cleaning agents, contact lens disinfection, and tooth bleaching products.
    7. Apparent Community consumption of TCHs was assessed on the basis of the volume of sales in the Community as provided by the Community industry, the sales volume of Ikegami Electronics (Europe) GmbH, statistics of imports of TCHs from Japan obtained from the 14(6) database, as well as information on purchases provided by one user of TCS.
    8. It has been alleged that the injury suffered by the Community industry is due to the royalties payable to the licence holder, Royal Philips Electronics Corporation, per unit produced, since this leads to a cost increase with which the imported products are allegedly not burdened and which could not been passed on to the customers.
    9. The testing and measurement methods below reference published specifications from the Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) Display Metrology Committee and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), and supplement those guidelines where necessary with methods developed in cooperation with the computer monitor industry.
    10. To this end, the Community industry was member of the Federation of Interested Parties in fair Competition in the Optical Media sector (‘FIPCOM’) which has in February 2006 reached an agreement with Royal Philips Electronics Corporations to pay a new lower rate of royalties.
    11. concerns for skin sensitisation as a consequence of dermal exposure arising from production of methyl methacrylate, polymethyl methacrylate, transesterification, cast sheet production, production of adhesives and reactive resins in chemical industry, production of adhesives, casting resins and floor coating materials, production of paints and varnishes, use of adhesives in plastics, electronics and glass industry, use of adhesives and floor coating in skilled trade area, use of casting resins in medical applications, orthopaedic workshops, dental laboratories and surgeries, manufacturing of lenses and ornamental decoration,
    12. Part 1: reinforcement of the workforce (eligible costs of EUR 4,3 million, of which EUR 3,1 million for general training [4] and EUR 1,2 million for specific training, and aid of EUR 1,8 million). This part aims to ensure that VCG workers have sufficient basic technical knowledge. The main topics covered are pneumatics, robotics, programmable logic control, electricity and electronics, cost management, social skills, management techniques, bodywork, painting, and car industry-specific software.
    13. concerns for skin sensitisation as a consequence of dermal exposure arising from production of methyl methacrylate, polymethyl methacrylate, transesterification, cast sheet production, production of adhesives and reactive resins in chemical industry, production of adhesives, casting resins and floor coating materials, production of paints and varnishes, use of adhesives in plastics, electronics and glass industry, use of adhesives and floor coating in skilled trade area, use of casting resins in medical applications, orthopaedic workshops, dental laboratories and surgeries, manufacturing of lenses and ornamental decoration, concerns for local effects as a consequence of repeated inhalation exposure arising from cast sheet production, production of reactive resins, production and use of adhesives and as well as production of paints, use of casting resins in orthopaedic workshops and dental laboratories and surgeries,
    14. The alleged subsidies consist, inter alia, of income tax programmes (e.g. income tax exemptions or reductions under the two free/three half programme, income tax reductions for high or new technology industries, income tax credits for domestically owned companies purchasing domestically produced equipment), indirect tax and import tariff programmes (e.g. value-added tax (‘VAT’) and tariff exemptions on imported equipment), preferential lending schemes (e.g. policy loans including export financing from State-owned commercial banks and government policy banks), grant programmes (e.g. the Development Fund for the Electronics and Information Industry (‘IT Fund’), the state key technologies renovation project fund, famous brands awards), government provision of goods and services for less than adequate numeration (e.g. provision of land use rights) as well as of local government preferential policies, including benefits in special zones and industrial parks (e.g. preferential policies in Shenzhen, Shanghai, Beijing, Xian).