Description
Delta De L'Okavango - Botswana - Africa
Added on the 20/09/2012 - Copyright : Ivy Beccu
INEOS Automotive has acquired Botswana-based Kavango Engineering, one of southern Africa’s most respected and established vehicle conversion specialists. The business has been renamed INEOS Kavango.Ideally located in Maun, northern Botswana, at the gateway to the Okavango Delta, INEOS Kavango’s 5,000m2 premises includes extensive fabrication and assembly facilities. Its highly skilled 70-strong workforce completes around 200 conversions a year. Members of the team that founded Kavango Engineering will remain involved in the business.INEOS Kavango will expand its current activities to encompass ground-up conversions and ongoing maintenance of Grenadier Station Wagon and Grenadier Quartermaster pick-ups for a wide range of use cases. These include extensive specialist modifications for the conservation, safari, anti-poaching, veterinary, primary healthcare and film production sectors. To accommodate future business growth, land adjacent to the existing INEOS Kavango site is earmarked for further development that will double the scale of the operation.
Preliminary data doesn't indicate that the Omicron variant is "more severe" than Delta, says Michael Ryan, the World Health Organization's emergencies director. SOUNDBITE
On en parle : Emission du jeudi 20 novembre 2014
Santa Cruz de La Palma (Spain), Oct 8 (EFE) .- The land gained by lava from the sea on the Spanish island of La Palma, the so-called lava delta ("fajana"), runs the risk of collapsing, if it continues its advance to greater depths in the ocean, which would be accompanied by the sudden release of gases, with hydromagmatic explosions and waves.FOOTAGE OF THE SITUATION OF THE DELTA IN LA PALMA, SPAIN
Tazacorte (Spain), Oct 7 (EFE) .- (Camera: Miguel Caalero) .- The lava delta or fajana created by the fall of lava on the ocean waters continues its growth in a north-south direction and already occupies a surface of about 38 hectares.FOOTAGE OF THE DELTA IN TAZACORTE, SPAIN
La Palma, Oct 2 (EFE).- La Palma island volcano continued its activity Saturday with an intense emission of gases as lava streams gained more ground on the sea. Scientists continued to monitor the two new lava streams, which headed to the sea, creating a lava delta of more than 27 hectares. (Camera: EFE).B-ROLL OF THE LAVA DELTA AND THE SMOKES FROM LA PALMA VOLCANO, ON CANARY ISLANDS, SPAIN.