Pursat: Difference between revisions

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Tag: 2017 source edit
Tag: 2017 source edit
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Pursat's tropical climate allows for a diverse range of agricultural activities. In the fertile lowlands, farmers cultivate like {{wp|sorghum}}, {{wp|millet}}, {{wp|yams}}, {{wp|sweet potatoes}}, {{wp|cowpeas}}, {{wp|bambara groundnut}}, {{wp|fave beans}}, and {{wp|bananas}}. Nomadic herders in the northern steppes raise livestock such as camels, goats, and sheep but due to the small scale and nomadic lifestyle these rarely make it to export markets and are consumed locally by those communities. The country possesses significant mineral resources, including {{wp|copper}}, {{wp|gold}}, and {{wp|phosphates}}. Mining operations contribute to the country's export earnings and are a major employer for the country. The financial sector is rapidly evolving, with the establishment of modern banking institutions and the growth of microfinance initiatives with investments primarily coming from [[Burgundie]]. While traditional financial practices like {{wp|hawala}} remain prevalent in some areas, the government is actively promoting financial inclusion and modernization. The manufacturing sector is primarily focused on the assembly of electronics, particularly microprocessors and cellphones. This industry has benefited from foreign investment, primarily from [[Burgundie]], and technology transfer, contributing to the country's economic growth and diversification. The government of Pursat hosts workshops for native skilled artisans to produce intricate textiles (rugs, wool, and tanned leather), traditional pottery (tagines in particular), jewelry, and camel and goat leather goods, which are sought after by both domestic and international consumers. Pursat's government is working with domestic and international companies to invest in tourism infrastructure that will lean into the purported {{wp|Biblical}} connections and become a hotspot for Christian pilgrims and religious tourism. Pursat's coastline offers abundant fishing opportunities, supporting both local fishing communities and a growing aquaculture industry. Deep-sea fishing vessels primarily catch {{wp|tuna}} and other {{wp|pelagic fish}}, while coastal communities engage in artisanal fishing practices. Aquaculture farms, particularly shrimp farms, have emerged as a significant contributor to seafood exports. As global awareness of environmental issues grows, Pursat is actively developing its green sector. Investments in renewable energy sources like solar and wind power are reducing the country's reliance on fossil fuels, but these efforts are still nascent.
Pursat's tropical climate allows for a diverse range of agricultural activities. In the fertile lowlands, farmers cultivate like {{wp|sorghum}}, {{wp|millet}}, {{wp|yams}}, {{wp|sweet potatoes}}, {{wp|cowpeas}}, {{wp|bambara groundnut}}, {{wp|fave beans}}, and {{wp|bananas}}. Nomadic herders in the northern steppes raise livestock such as camels, goats, and sheep but due to the small scale and nomadic lifestyle these rarely make it to export markets and are consumed locally by those communities. The country possesses significant mineral resources, including {{wp|copper}}, {{wp|gold}}, and {{wp|phosphates}}. Mining operations contribute to the country's export earnings and are a major employer for the country. The financial sector is rapidly evolving, with the establishment of modern banking institutions and the growth of microfinance initiatives with investments primarily coming from [[Burgundie]]. While traditional financial practices like {{wp|hawala}} remain prevalent in some areas, the government is actively promoting financial inclusion and modernization. The manufacturing sector is primarily focused on the assembly of electronics, particularly microprocessors and cellphones. This industry has benefited from foreign investment, primarily from [[Burgundie]], and technology transfer, contributing to the country's economic growth and diversification. The government of Pursat hosts workshops for native skilled artisans to produce intricate textiles (rugs, wool, and tanned leather), traditional pottery (tagines in particular), jewelry, and camel and goat leather goods, which are sought after by both domestic and international consumers. Pursat's government is working with domestic and international companies to invest in tourism infrastructure that will lean into the purported {{wp|Biblical}} connections and become a hotspot for Christian pilgrims and religious tourism. Pursat's coastline offers abundant fishing opportunities, supporting both local fishing communities and a growing aquaculture industry. Deep-sea fishing vessels primarily catch {{wp|tuna}} and other {{wp|pelagic fish}}, while coastal communities engage in artisanal fishing practices. Aquaculture farms, particularly shrimp farms, have emerged as a significant contributor to seafood exports. As global awareness of environmental issues grows, Pursat is actively developing its green sector. Investments in renewable energy sources like solar and wind power are reducing the country's reliance on fossil fuels, but these efforts are still nascent.


===Manufacturing===
<gallery mode="packed">
File:Colonne_distillazione.jpg|Fractal distillation plant columns
File:Cordage_en_chanvre.jpg|Pursatni natural fiber
</gallery>
The manufacturing sector in Pursat is predominantly based around the processing and product making of natural products for export. {{wp|Ropework}} remains a key manufacturing industry, with a significant portion of the world's natural fiber rope made in Pursat. The phosphates mined in the country are processed into {{wp|feed phosphates}}, {{wp|fertilizer}}, {{wp|fluoride glass}}, and {{wp|Phosphates in detergent|detergents}}. There is also a significant number of {{wp|fractal distillation}} and {{wp|chemical plants}} across the country that produce noble gases (particularly {{wp|helium}} (He), {{wp|neon}} (Ne), {{wp|argon}} (Ar), {{wp|krypton}} (Kr), and {{wp|xenon}} (Xe)) which are sold to industrial firms around the world.
====Bennu et Nuit====
The [[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]] company ''Jean fils et Jean fils'' has a partnership with ''Bennu et Nuit'', a chain of factory farms in Pursat that grow and harvest {{wp|papyrus}} as a sustainable product that is uses for a number of its products. Once of their products, the {{wp|Papyrus sanitary pad}}, has been credited as a major breakthrough for women in [[Daria]]. The papyrus sanitary pad has helped make sanitary pads an affordable and accessible necessity for young girls in developing countries. They help tackle the problem of girls' absenteeism in school owing to menstruation and associated behaviors for which they do not have adequate facilities (for example: lack of privacy for cleaning, poor availability of pads, lack of education about menstrual hygiene, lack of separate toilet facilities, and lack of access to water). Since starting its partnership, ''Bennu et Nuit'' has increased production and output from 7,000 sanitary pads a month to 85,400 pads a month which use the [[Burgundie|Burgoignesc]] trade networks to sell their products all across [[Daria]].
====Direct Cordage of Pursat====
Direct Cordage of Pursat is a multinational natural fiber rope manufacturer based in Clysvatjer, Pursat. It owns farms and manufactories across Daria and produces 550,000 tonnes of natural fiber rope each year and employs 84,030 people, 14,390 of them in [[Pursat]]. They manufacture rope and line in {{wp|sisal}}, {{wp|coir}}, {{wp|jute}}, {{wp|manila}}, and {{wp|papyrus}}, but their papyrus cordage is their flagship product. They are also in a partnership with [[Estia-Odoneru Gypsum, Salt, and Aggregate]] to make fibers for the latter's {{wp|fiber-reinforced concrete}}.
===Recycling and waste management===
===Recycling and waste management===
====Ship breaking====
====Ship breaking====