BOLD FUTURA HIRES “DREAM TEAM”
TAGRUATO LAUNCHES FIRST SATELLITE
To Investors: Concerning the RRC Article
Ganu Yoshida to Meet with Tanzanian Energy Correspondent to Discuss Mineral Excavation.
September 9th, 2007
On the Rise Magazine Comments on Tagruato Stock Rise.
August 13th, 2007
Tagruato Releases Second Quarter Results.
July 27th, 2007
Investor Conference Held in Tokyo.
July 2nd, 2007 - Tagruato to Update Shipping Fleet.
Slusho! Ices Competitors
May 28th, 2007 - Stocks Continue to Grow
Investing in the future of energy
April 1st, 2007 - A newly formed Tagruato committee invests in future energy development
Tagruato announces plans for "undersea construction sites"
Next time you drive by a large construction site demolishing a building or putting up new infrastructure, imagine it underwater.
Such is the latest directive of the Tagruato corporation. Company spokeswoman Suzume Soga announced this week that Tagruato has long been developing vehicles and machinery that will operate at the same capacity as the bulldozers and cranes you pass on the freeway each day, but also function at the ocean's greatest depths. COO Danno Jo, right hand man and cousin of CEO Ganu Yoshida, has been overseeing the revolutionary project.
"There are great reservoirs under the ocean floor that no one can get to due to obstruction by physical elements," explained Jo at the December 18th press conference. "With these new technologies in place, Tagruato will destroy any barrier."
Another benefit of these new technologies is the ability to actually construct drilling stations from the ground up. In the past, the process has been to build the various parts of the station in Tagruato's mainland factories, ship them across the oceans on aircraft carriers, and then reassemble them underwater. The process can be costly and time consuming.
"We can now skip that step," said Danno. "In a perfect world, we'll never have to work from the surface again."
Tagruato recognized as top Japanese corporation
October 13th, 2006 - Tokyo Business Quarterly counts company among Japan's best