Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Toyota eQ/Scion iQ EV is based on Toyota's three generations of FT-EV concept. Shown is the Toyota FT-EV III concept car at the 2011 Tokyo Motor Show. A prototype of the Toyota eQ (Scion iQ EV in the US) was exhibited at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show. The Scion iQ EV is the successor to the FT-EV II as an electric vehicle based on the Toyota ...
Language links are at the top of the page across from the title.
The Toyota FT-EV II is a small, battery electric, concept car built by Toyota as a modified Toyota iQ and first shown at the October 2009 Tokyo Motor Show. [107] It differs from the FT-EV by seating four people, by having more parts of the body transparent and electrically operated sliding doors .
The Moroccan automotive industry is led by investment by French Renault-Nissan Alliance and PSA Group car companies. BYD leads the Chinese investment in Morocco. Investment is encouraged by the Moroccan government by removing certain taxes in the first five years [1] in order to encourage the companies to come.
Geographic limits of the map: Top: 36° 15' N; Bottom: 27° 18' N; Left: 013° 33' W; Right: 000° 36' W; Date: November 2009: Source: Own work. Sources of data: NGDC World Data Bank II (public domain); NGDC GSHHS (public domain); Map Library (public domain). 2016 revision updated to new 2015 regions based on OSM data from OpenStreetMap ...
The Japanese Toyota Motor Corporation initially acquired 27.8% of the shares in TSAM in 1996, increased this share to 75% in 2002 and finally to 100% in 2009. [1] [3] [4] In 2006, Toyota SA surpassed BMW South Africa as the country's largest automobile exporter. [5] In 2014, Toyota had 8,500 employees in South Africa. [6]
The coastline at the base of Jebel Musa is a Ramsar site, and this area and portions of the mountainous interior are part of the Intercontinental Biosphere Reserve of the Mediterranean. [ 4 ] The prefecture is drained by five wadis or seasonal rivers: Oued Smir, Oued Negro, Oued Fnideq, Oued Rmel and Oued Martil. [ 3 ]
Map of Moroccan highways and expressways Casablanca-Rabat expressway (A1) going northbound near Temara. Morocco's network of motorways is administered by the state-owned company Autoroutes du Maroc (ADM). It runs the network on a pay-per-use basis, with toll stations placed along its length. The general speed limit is 120 km/h.