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Vietnam Electricity (EVN; Vietnamese: Tập đoàn Điện lực Việt Nam, lit. 'Vietnam Electricity Group') is the national and the sole public power company in Vietnam . It was established by the government of Vietnam as a state-owned company in 1994, and has operated officially as a one-member limited liability company since 2010.
EVNTelecom was a Vietnamese telecommunications company. It was set up as a 100% state-owned and self-financed subsidiary of Vietnam Electricity Group (EVN). It was one of five mobile network providers in Vietnam, and the fourth to launch its service.
Électricité du Laos (EDL) (Lao: ໄຟຟ້າລາວ) is the state corporation of Laos that owns and operates the country's electricity generation, electricity transmission and electricity distribution assets. The company also manages the import and export of electricity from the national electricity grid of the country.
Middle School of Mechanical Engineering (now Hanoi University of Industry) .l April 2000, implementing the policy of rearranging the network of schools under the Vietnam Electricity Corporation (EVN), the Ministry of Industry decided. merged the in-service training school with Electricity High School I and named it Electric School No.
EVN Macedonia (Macedonian: ЕВН Македонија; Albanian: EVN Maqedoni) is a power distribution and supply company in North Macedonia. [3] It was split in 2005 from former state integrated power company ESM and bought in 2006 by Austrian-based EVN Group. [N 1] The company has about 800 000 electricity meters in the country. [4]
EVN may refer to: Electric vehicle network; Escape Velocity Nova, a video game; English visual novel, a term used to refer to visual novels originally written in English;
The China–Vietnam border is the international boundary between China and Vietnam, consisting of a 1,297 km (806 mi) terrestrial border stretching from the tripoint with Laos in the west to the Gulf of Tonkin coast in the east, and a maritime border in the Gulf of Tonkin and South China Sea.
The Nam Theun 2 Hydropower Project, or simply NT2, is a hydroelectric dam on the Nam Theun River in Laos.Commercial operation of the plant began in April 2010. [1] The scheme diverts water from the Nam Theun, a tributary of the Mekong River, to the Xe Bang Fai River, enabling a generation capacity of 1,075 MW, from a 350 m (1,148 ft) difference in elevation between the reservoir and the power ...