GOOMOO a travel agency in India with cooperation of Orbit have invited the plastics processors to Plastindia which will be held in Feb. 2018 (7-12) at Gujarat. The following invitation has been sent and PIMI will re-publish it without any responsibility:
PLASTINDIA 2018 will be held at Gandhinagar, Gujarat from 7th to 12th February 2018. If you have missed an opportunity to attend PlastIndia 2015 then ensure your presence at PLASTINDIA 2018 which will definitely add and create value in your existing business prospects.
This event will be an excellent platform for exhibitors to publicize and display their products, Innovation and services. Build brand image and develop leadership in market position in global areas.
It’s been an Ideal stage for those who are interested to explore and acknowledge the most recent technologies and trends of the relevant market as well as exhibits a vast range of products and services related to Plastic Industry. The event will attract key industry players and decision makers from the corporate and public sector in the region providing a strategic setting to forge business tie-ups and contacts.
Come be a part of Asia’s biggest plastic exhibition with Orbit. Orbit Help you and provide you in all type of Hospitality services ( Accommodation, transfer and flight services )
About Gujarat:
Gujarat, India’s westernmost state, has varied terrain and numerous sacred sites. In its urban center of Ahmedabad is the Calico Museum of Textiles, displaying antique and modern Indian fabrics. Spiritual leader Mahatma Gandhi’s base from 1917–1930 was Sabarmati Ashram, where his living quarters remain on view. The Jama Masjid (Friday Mosque), built in the 15th century, has a huge courtyard and a columned design.
The state encompasses some sites of the ancient Indus Valley Civilization, such as Lothal and Dholavira. Lothal is believed to be one of the world’s first seaports. Gujarat’s coastal cities, chiefly Bharuch and Khambhat, served as ports and trading centres in the Maurya and Gupta empires, and during the succession of royal Saka dynasties from the Western Satraps era.
Gujarat was known to the ancient Greeks, and was familiar in other Western centres of civilisation through the end of the European Middle Ages. The oldest written record of Gujarat’s 2,000-year maritime history is documented in a Greek book titled The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea: Travel and Trade in the Indian Ocean by a Merchant of the First Century.