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| Syria
Today | The Other Natural Resource Syria Today Five countries – Morocco, China, South Africa, Jordan and the United States – account for more than 90 percent of global phosphate reserves. ... | ||
| How
BHP is breaking new ground Business Spectator There are actually plenty of phosphate reserves still to develop, but their quality is generally lower than existing sources. BHP briefly owned a world ... |
Hi everyone,
This seems like an impossibly long link, but it does seem to work --- for
those interested in SOIL's ecosan work in Haiti, an update...
http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=oay9cgdab&v=001sR9KXnYiTHjBwmUGNr4RdThtYCMfvdjzUF7vGrGTTKBAOAD3oH7eOu9LMpvnPFSDlqGOMmwu-jqIyB3LwJDsNwmzkHPolumYHAeYpMwxsjLi1aeFO3jjdX1OpnQFHfZi8B1Rz9BWtyvMGzOmPoTKw0PcIdYgESdm-X7xfCq_GeA73jtbKBGb0Y1b2ioJbT-j-uKAVbXTQCo6gpijOz89orrlc5vre-TSURqXMd7z_SqwjWGK7gCzWw%3D%3D
and for those wishing to purchase César Añorve's (in Mexico) u-d seats---
here is his on-line catalog...
http://esac.laneta.apc.org/citacating.htm
it hasn't been updated in a while but you get the general idea and the
email address is correct.
abrazos,
george anna
On Fri, 10 Sep 2010 22:13:52 +0200, "Arno Rosemarin"
<arno.ro...@sei.se> wrote:
>
> News 2 new results for "phosphate reserves"
>
> Syria Today | The Other Natural Resource
> <http://www.google.com/url?sa=X&q=http://www.syria-today.com/index.php/b
> usiness-news/features/12171-the-other-natural-resource&ct=ga&cad=:s1:f2:
> v0:d1:i0:lt:e0:p0:t1284146862:&cd=gVlkpFuQ-Hs&usg=AFQjCNEOB5kiirudKA2EcH
> 7THsFRRy9qXg>
> Syria Today
> Five countries - Morocco, China, South Africa, Jordan and the United
> States - account for more than 90 percent of global phosphate reserves.
> ...
>
> How BHP is breaking new ground
> <http://www.google.com/url?sa=X&q=http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs
> .nsf/Article/BHP-Billiton-Rio-Tinto-Vale-PotashCorp-mining-reso-pd201009
> 10-962FY%3FOpenDocument&ct=ga&cad=:s1:f2:v0:d1:i0:lt:e1:p1:t1284146862:&
> cd=gVlkpFuQ-Hs&usg=AFQjCNGyBK3bNXc2ljBCjM12xeJe7j2Bcw>
> Business Spectator
> There are actually plenty of phosphate reserves still to develop, but
> their quality is generally lower than existing sources. BHP briefly
> owned a world ...
>