Romanian road and bridge construction company Drumuri si Poduri has announced a contract notice for the delivery of ten dumper trucks with a top capacity ranging between 23 and 26 tonnes each.
The vehicles can be leased, purchased or leased with a purchase option.
The estimated value of the contract is 7,000,000 lei, VAT excluded.
The contract is to be completed within 60 months from its signing.
The tender security is set at 140,000 lei.
The tender documentation costs 50 lei.
Further information is available at:
Drumuri si Poduri S.A.
Address:
1-3 Dragos Voda Str.,
330034 Deva,
Romania
Contact person: Marius Canda
Tel.: +40 254 225 220
Fax: +40 254 225 088
E-mail: marketing_djd@yahoo.com, djddeva@xnet.ro
An official UK report showed that the British industry is suffering as 540,000 of the migrants who have come from the EU new member states returned to their countries following the global crisis. How a massive reverse migration will affect the SEE?
Oct 8, 2008
The new labour force will push up the local economies
The gross domestic product will slow its growth due to the lower level of money transfers from abroad
The returning experts will lead to unstable social security system and dissatisfaction of population
The reverse migration will raise the level of business culture to the one in the countries in western Europe
The reverse migration will not provoke major changes
The great Croatian humanist and inventor Faust Vrancic was the first ever parachute jumper...
The great Croatian humanist and inventor Faust Vrancic was the first ever parachute jumper. Born in 1551 in the Adriatic town of Sibenik in Croatia, he used the drawings of Leonardo da Vinci to perform the first-ever parachute jump.
The event was recorded in a book written by English bishop John Wilkins, secretary at the Royal Society in London, just 30 years later. The title of this book is „Mathematical Magic of the Wonders that may be Performed by Mechanical Geometry, part I: Concerning Mechanical Powers Motion, part II, Deadloss or Mechanical Motions', published in London in 1648.