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Proterra Inc. was an American electric vehicle and powertrain manufacturer based in Burlingame, California. The company designed and manufactured battery electric transit buses , powertrain systems for other heavy-duty vehicle builders and charging systems for fleets of heavy-duty vehicles.
Proterra may refer to: Proterra (earthen architecture project), a project partner of the UNESCO World Heritage Earthen Architecture Programme; Proterra (Brazil), Brazilian government rural poverty and land redistribution initiative of the 1970s; Proterra, Inc., a company making electric vehicles; Proterra, an album by the band Runrig
Proterra is an Ibero American organization promoting earthen architecture. It was initially founded as a four-year project of CYTED in 2001, [ 1 ] but continued to become a UNESCO WHEAP partner in 2012.
Each of the three battery options is also offered with one of two drivetrains, which Proterra brands DuoPower or ProDrive. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The standard ZX5 model, with a 220 kWh energy storage system (corresponding to the previous Catalyst XR model), can travel up to 125 or 120 mi (201 or 193 km) (for the 35 ft or 40 ft models, respectively) on a ...
Relations between Albanians and Turkey date back from the arrival of the Ottomans to the region in the 15th century. [1] Many Albanians during the Ottoman period converted to the official religion Islam and contributed through administrative, political, and military positions to the Ottoman Empire and culturally to the wider Muslim world.
TARC EcoRide BE35, docked in overhead charger (2015). The HFC35 prototype exhibited at APTA '08 in San Diego [24] was later demonstrated in Washington, D.C. (Nov 2008) [5] and a nationwide tour in regular service was scheduled for 2009, starting in Columbia, South Carolina [15] as a football stadium shuttle for the University of South Carolina (with maintenance, refueling, and charging at ...
PROTERRA, or Programme for Land Redistribution and Stimulation of Agroindustry in the North and Northeast, was a Brazilian government programme of the 1970s to address rural poverty founded following the approval of the Land Statute in 1964. [1] In the Amazon basin it was supported by the World Bank. [2]
Azad Zaman (died 2021), Meghalayan Bengali politician; Baby Zaman (1923–2013), Bengali actor and producer; Badar uz Zaman (born 1940), Pakistani classical musician; Badruzzaman Badol (born 1969), Bangladeshi High Court justice; C. B. Zaman (c. 1945–2024), Bangladeshi film director; Daulat Zaman (1947–2002), Bengali cricketer