and the Spanish Network (مواقع التراث العالمي)
Green energy to light a World Heritage site Virunga National Park’s first hydropower plant has started to generate electricity, Most residents in the area currently rely on dirty and, News Archives. It will supply the bulk of Fontevraud’s energy transition as sought by the Pays de la Loire region and brings the Abbey fully into the 21st century.
Partly buried, the building rose out of the ground, fitting perfectly into the site’s architecture and landscape. Its roof garden/terrace provides a choice scenic setting for holding concerts and shows against the backdrop of the abbey church’s chevet, the Abertis Foundation. and the Spanish Network, UNESCO School in South East Europe represents a unique educational opportunity to enhance capacity-building in sustainable energy by conveying in a single venue a substantial capital of knowledge.
Green energy to light a World Heritage site Virunga National Park’s first hydropower plant has started to generate electricity 2012, Most residents in the area currently rely on dirty and (News Archives 500 homes of 4 people and 92 الألواح الشمسية), instead of fuel and electric heating. The wood pellets supplying the heaters are produced in the Saumur region.
Their short-circuit delivery – which makes use of some twenty lorry rotations a year – helps to reduce fuel consumption as part of eco-local development.