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Ambo Mineral Water is a brand of naturally-carbonated bottled mineral water, sourced from the springs in Ambo Senkele, [1] near the town of Ambo [2] [3] in central Ethiopia.It is a popular drink in Ethiopia, [1] [4] [5] and has been described as the "oldest modern mineral water" [1] and Ethiopia's "oldest mineral water bottler."
Bottled water is drinking water (e.g., well water, distilled water, mineral water, or spring water) packaged in plastic, cartons, aluminum, or glass water bottles. Bottled water may be carbonated or not. Sizes range from small single serving bottles to large carboys for water coolers. The environmental impact of bottled water is 3,500 times ...
An Aetna Group study in 2015 concluded that each litre of bottled water requires 240 kilojoules of energy to produce. [32] The lifecycle carbon footprint for a half litre of small pack bottled water is 111 grams CO 2 equivalent. [35] By comparison, the same sized PET plastic-bottled soft drink produces 240 grams CO 2 equivalent.
Islam is the religion of 10.91% of the population. [1] Most Muslims in Kenya are Sunni, mostly of the Shafii school of Islamic law. Approximately 8% are non-denominational Muslims, [23] 7% identify themselves as Shia and about 4% identify themselves as Ahmadi Muslims, [24] as well as a small proportion of Ibadism practitioners. [25]
The council has one national and two regional consultative and experienced workshops which involved 870 religious leaders and faith-based organization on the issues of religious harmony and plurality. Each adherents of religion has the right to establish educational institution, publishing and distributing books, newspapers and magazines.
In 1961, while Kenya was still a British colony, Ethiopia appointed its first Ambassador to Kenya. Kenya opened an embassy in Addis Ababa six years later. [1] In 1964 the two countries signed a defence pact which has remained in force to this date against Somalia for the Somali inhabited territories currently in Ethiopia and Kenya respectively. [3]
Naomi Kipury, Oral Literature of the Maasai (1983: East African Educational Publishers Ltd., PO Box 45314 Nairobi, Kenya Spencer, Paul, (2003), "Providence and the cosmology of misfortune" and "Loonkidongi diviners and Prophets", in Spencer, P, Time, Space, and the Unknown: Maasai configurations of power and providence , Routledge, London (pp ...
The power generated in Ethiopia is less expensive than that generated in Kenya, and electricity imports over the interconnector were expected to lower power prices in Kenya and promote industrial growth in the country. [2] The project was budgeted at KSh 126 billion (approximately US$1.26 billion).