Ruilai Technology participates in the international review of iron oxide pigments
Release time:
2015-11-27
Ruilai Technology participates in the international review of iron oxide pigments
News dynamicsNovember 27, 2015 7:41 AM
Recently, the national standard expert review meeting of "energy consumption limit per unit product of iron oxide pigments" was held in Beijing. The standard was proposed by the Department of resource conservation and environmental protection of the national development and Reform Commission and the Department of energy conservation and comprehensive utilization of the Ministry of industry and information technology, and jointly drafted by China Coatings Industry Association, China Petroleum and Chemical Industry Federation and six domestic iron oxide production enterprises. Our company was invited to attend the meeting, and Hu Dexiang, assistant to the general manager, participated in the standard review as a member of the expert group.
Iron oxide pigments mainly include red, yellow and black products, which can be mixed with each other to form ten colors, such as orange red, orange, dark red, purple, blue, dark blue, green and dark green. It is widely used in coatings, inks, plastics, rubber, construction, electronics and other industries. It is an important inorganic synthetic pigment, and its output ranks second in the world after titanium dioxide. The formulation and implementation of the "Iron Oxide Pigment Unit Product Energy Consumption Limit" standard will give full play to the leading role of the standard, establish a benchmark for industry energy efficiency, promote the improvement of the technical level of my country's iron oxide pigment industry and the optimization and upgrading of the industrial structure, and ensure iron oxide pigments The sustainable development of the industry.
It is understood that the "Iron Oxide Pigment Unit Product Energy Consumption Limit" standard was included in the second batch of national standard revision plans issued by the National Standardization Management Committee in 2011, and it took four years for experts from industry associations and member units to complete its draft.
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