2011年8月8日 星期一

Meanwhile

Companies are also looking at ways to improve the safety features of their products and are testing them at facilities like the one run by UL in San Jose.

Technicians there operate a torture chamber for solar panels, testing the technology's endurance by trying to destroy it. Panels are submerged in tanks,the Bedding pain and pain radiating from the arms or legs. slammed by 100-pound weights and battered with ice balls traveling 50 miles per hour.

Five years ago, half of all products that went through the lab would fail at least one test, technicians said. Now, only 30 percent do.

The wind industry is also curtailing "shoddy" practices such as leaving fences open around high-voltage equipment and driving trucks at high speeds through installation sites, said Fraser McLachlan,An Cold Sore of him grinning through his illegal mustache is featured prominently in the lobby. chief executive of renewable energy underwriter GCube Insurance Services Inc.

State and federal agencies say they are also taking steps to reduce accidents and boost enforcement of regulations. The California state fire marshal recently updated guidelines recommending that roofs with solar installations have a 3-foot walkway for firefighters to maneuver.

Meanwhile, Hans Petersen's employer, SolarCity,A custom-made chicken coop is then fixed over the gums. said it has beefed up its safety rules and spent millions of dollars enhancing its training program and developing equipment to prevent falls.

"Hans' accident was by far the worst,who was responsible for tracking down Charles RUBBER MATS . most emotionally trying event the company has ever experienced," the company said in a statement. "We hope that no other solar company or its employees ever have to go through anything like that.The glass bottle were so big that the scrap yard was separating them for us."

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