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Clinging to a Greek cliff, this monastery welcomes people from around the world. No women allowed

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Fact Check   来源:Travel  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:AP writer Kimberly Kindy contributed from Washington.

AP writer Kimberly Kindy contributed from Washington.

National Park Service, Fort Payne, Ala. (5,300 square feet)Federal Railroad Administration, Fort Worth, Texas (5,835 square feet)

Clinging to a Greek cliff, this monastery welcomes people from around the world. No women allowed

Office of the Secretary, Hartford, Conn. (24,647 square feet)National Park Service, Homestead, Fla. (21,356 square feet)Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Houston, Texas (7,201 square feet)

Clinging to a Greek cliff, this monastery welcomes people from around the world. No women allowed

Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Independence, Ohio (6,573 square feet)Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Linthicum Heights, Md. (3,500 square feet)

Clinging to a Greek cliff, this monastery welcomes people from around the world. No women allowed

Food and Drug Administration, Louisville, Ky. (3,938 square feet)

Small Business Administration, North Charleston, S.C. (465 square feet)The report described “severe corrosion” in pipes and protective barriers around oil tanks in the vessel Fluminense, off Brazil.

Two workers were left “with moderate to severe burns” after an incident on a vessel off the U.S. coast in 2016.There were “degraded facilities” on the gas-producing ship Prelude anchored off Australia, where fire broke out in 2021. In 2023, more than a year after the safety report, problems on the Prelude persisted, according to Australian regulators who found health and safety violations related to “exposure to chemicals and risk of an explosion.” They ordered improvements.

In the case of the Prelude, Shell said a dedicated local team of safety engineers and experts looked after the vessel but didn’t provide more details.Other incidents have been reported by regulators or in the press. For example, another Shell ship off Nigeria, the Sea Eagle, began to take on seawater in 2022 and needed urgent repairs, something Cox said was highly unusual for floating production vessels.

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