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Shell takes over commercial road transport services in Romania

Shell takes over commercial road transport services in Romania Shell takes over commercial road transport services in Romania The oil company will directly manage operations in Romania to use digitalization and new fuels in commercial transport. Last update: Shell Commercial Road Transport will start operating directly in Romania starting April 1. A team of 57 people will provide support to Romanian B2B customers from the office located in Bucharest. Shell will now manage directly services that have been provided by a local agent for 15 years.    Both our global customers and those in Romania are looking to adapt to changes in the market and increasingly use new technologies and digital solutions. In order to support them as efficiently as possible, Shell capitalizes on their global capabilities and know-how so that they can offer them the energy solutions and services they need,” said Patrick Carre, Vice President of Global Commercial Road Transport at Shell.

A new normal life emerged in May 2020

Bejon Haswell/Stuff/Stuff Motorists returned to Stafford Street, Timaru, on the first day of Level 2 restrictions on May 14, 2020. In our series looking back on the year that was, Doug Sail writes on finding a “new normal” during May in a Covid-19 affected world. As alert level 4 lockdown ended, and New Zealand entered the different rules and restrictions of alert level three and eventually level two, the chance came to assess the effects. One of the biggest impacts was to business operations with areas like the Mackenzie District taking huge hits with New Zealand’s borders closed to most, drastically cutting international tourist numbers.

More study areas included in free vocational education

+Undoctored Media release from the Tertiary Education Commission Friday 18 December 2020, 01:11 PM 1 minute to Read The Government has expanded the target areas of the Targeted Training and Apprenticeship Fund (TTAF) to include conservation, information technology and additional community support skills. TTAF was introduced in June 2020 as part of our response to COVID-19 to strengthen the skills pipeline New Zealand needs to support economic recovery. It makes all apprenticeships and a range of targeted training programmes at sub-degree level free for learners, says Gillian Dudgeon, Tertiary Education Commission Deputy Chief Executive, Delivery. TTAF is now being expanded to include conservation, information technology and additional community support skills for the 2021 academic year, to encourage more people to get qualifications in these areas. Community support includes enrolled nursing, cleaning, and support for people with disabilities, including training pe

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