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Mahindra XUV500 side and rear. The XUV500 was launched in 2 variants in 2011, sharing the same engine: the W6 in two-wheel drive only. The W6 includes a 6-inch monochrome infotainment display, two airbags, ABS with electronic brake-force distribution (EBD), and disc brakes on all wheels.
The XUV 3XO has a seating capacity for 5 passengers and a boot space of 364 litres. It has a 42 litres (11 US gal) fuel tank, and a mini spare wheel. It has a McPherson strut front suspension with an anti-roll bar, and a torsion beam suspension with coil springs in the rear. Its turning radius is 5.3 metres (17 ft).
The XUV700 is offered with one petrol engine and one diesel engine option. The former is a 2.0-litre four-cylinder turbocharged mStallion unit which is tuned to produce 200 PS (197 hp; 147 kW) and 380 N⋅m (38.7 kg⋅m; 280 lb⋅ft).
GMC Envoy, a 1997–2008 American mid-size SUV, pickup truck variant called Envoy XUV; HSV Avalanche, a 2003–2005 Australian mid-size performance crossover, pickup truck variant called Avalanche XUV; Mahindra XUV, a series of Indian SUVs which include: Mahindra XUV300, a 2019–present subcompact SUV; Mahindra XUV500, a 2011–2021 compact SUV
The least concern is given for the backbone of the electric grid. Ethiopia steadily invests in high voltage transmission lines (130 kV ac, 230 kV ac; 400 kV ac). For large energy exports to the wider East African area, Ethiopia and Kenya are now building a 500 kV HVDC line over 1045 km length, that is expected to carry 2 GW. [27]
On 29 April 2024 Mahindra announced the facelifted version of XUV300, named XUV 3XO. It retains the same design but some changes which is Front LED Headlamps, 10 inch Touchscreen with AdrenoX, 10.25 inch Instrument cluster, 360-degree camera, Panoramic Sunroof, connected LED Tail lamps and 7 speakers by Harman Kardon. It comes 2 series which is ...
The Sodo–Moyale–Suswa High Voltage Power Line (or Ethiopia–Kenya HVDC Interconnector) is a 500 kV bipolar high-voltage direct current electricity power transmission line connecting Ethiopia with Kenya. It was completed in November 2022.
In 2018, access of electricity in Ethiopia reached 45%, and power generation, especially hydropower, tripled in a decade from about 850 MW to above 2,000 MW. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] According to the World Bank , [ 14 ] power outage of Ethiopia occurred 8.2 times in a typical month, each average duration of 5.8 hours.