«We have
done enough infrastructure works in the Volta region, the people of Volta region will renew the mandate of John Dramani Mahama and his government» the Volta regional Minister posited.
Instead, I chose Brazil because I've lived here before, speak Portuguese, and wanted a place
with enough infrastructure for it not to be a huge culture shock for the family, yet exotic enough to be interesting.
This also has a knock - on effect: As food security declines and poverty increases, these people will end up migrating to urban areas in search of work — further stressing areas already trying to adapt to changing climate and
building enough infrastructure to accommodate these newcomers.
And I've seen studies that show renewables can't power industrial civilisation, as we know it, because of the low net energy return (even if the resources were available to build out a
big enough infrastructure).
The San Blas Islands, located off Panama's southeastern coast, is the best kind of Caribbean island: postcard perfect white - sand beaches, extremely friendly locals, a chance to experience indigenous life with the Kuna Yala tribe, and
just enough infrastructure (electricity is provided via generators) to provide simple comforts while keeping the tourist machine at bay.
The state does not have
enough infrastructure in place to coop with the previous growth projections of population by 2020.
«You have remote resources, and there's just
not enough infrastructure to move that energy to the market,» says Wayne Galli, executive vice president of engineering at Clean Line Energy Partners, which plans to build four HVDC lines.
Neither government has
enough infrastructure to exploit that endless ocean.
«Natural gas costs could go up and subject ratepayers to higher costs, that's a fallout of not having
enough infrastructure.»
By 2024, NASA experts expect to have
enough infrastructure to support a permanent human presence with four astronauts rotating every six months, the same length of a stay as on the International Space Station.
In a few years, there will be
enough infrastructure to gauge true consumer demand.
Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada (DFAIT) advises against non-essential travel to Haiti, asking that only those with the skill sets needed go as they don't have
enough infrastructure in the country to support more people.