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The End of the Renewable Energy Boom - OilPrice.com
Tue, 08 Jun 2010 13:20:02 GMT+00:00
OilPrice.com What the Ernst & Young report calls "new climate related products and services" is the revenue side of the coin , with the costs side addressed by clipping ...
Tue, 08 Jun 2010 13:20:02 GMT+00:00
OilPrice.com What the Ernst & Young report calls "new climate related products and services" is the revenue side of the coin , with the costs side addressed by clipping ...
Hope for new Vatican coins without the tourist markup
Tom Heneghan
ue, 01 Dec 2009 11:09:44 GM
Before the . euro. was introduced, the world's smallest state issued its own lira similar to the . Italian. lira. The Vatican has the right to issue 1074, 000 euros in . coins. per year. But, as the Commission noted, it issues virtually all its ...
Tom Heneghan
ue, 01 Dec 2009 11:09:44 GM
Before the . euro. was introduced, the world's smallest state issued its own lira similar to the . Italian. lira. The Vatican has the right to issue 1074, 000 euros in . coins. per year. But, as the Commission noted, it issues virtually all its ...
Are there any European countries which still let you use pre-Euro coins as payment?
Q. We're traveling to Europe and wondering if it's worthwhile to take along our old pocket money in Italian Lira, Danish Kroner and Dutch Gelder coins (the equivalent of 50 dollars total at the time, which was early 90s).
Asked by Grace J - Sun Nov 16 16:26:00 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Denmark still uses kronar, so bring those. Dutch guilder coins can not be exchanged anymore, at least not by individuals, your only change there is to drop them into the charity boxes at the airport where they collect all spare change, maybe they can still exchange them. I found that you can still exchange lira coins but you will lot of those before you will have enough of them to be useful. I would also drop them in the same collection box. This is a site with the official info: Anyhow, I do not $50 worth of coins would be enough to spend a morning in an bank office, and likely it will cost you more in travel cost than you will have in change, and you said that the total of the coins would be that much, so you would have much less per… [cont.]
Answered by Willeke - Sun Nov 16 17:27:00 2008
Q. We're traveling to Europe and wondering if it's worthwhile to take along our old pocket money in Italian Lira, Danish Kroner and Dutch Gelder coins (the equivalent of 50 dollars total at the time, which was early 90s).
Asked by Grace J - Sun Nov 16 16:26:00 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Denmark still uses kronar, so bring those. Dutch guilder coins can not be exchanged anymore, at least not by individuals, your only change there is to drop them into the charity boxes at the airport where they collect all spare change, maybe they can still exchange them. I found that you can still exchange lira coins but you will lot of those before you will have enough of them to be useful. I would also drop them in the same collection box. This is a site with the official info: Anyhow, I do not $50 worth of coins would be enough to spend a morning in an bank office, and likely it will cost you more in travel cost than you will have in change, and you said that the total of the coins would be that much, so you would have much less per… [cont.]
Answered by Willeke - Sun Nov 16 17:27:00 2008
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