Further work Sample Clauses

Further work. (a) If, subsequent to the initial Work undertaken by Grantee for its Facility, either Grantor or Grantee desires to undertake any Work in the Crossing Area in respect of its Facility, this Agreement shall be deemed to grant consent to that party, and the provisions of this Agreement shall apply mutatis mutandis to all subsequent Work undertaken by either party under this Clause 7; and, for further certainty, the provisions of this Agreement shall be read as if “Grantee” were substituted for “Grantor” and vice versa as the situation requires.
Further work. (a) If, subsequent to the initial Work undertaken by the Minister for its Facility, the Minister desires to undertake any Work in the Crossing Area in respect of its Facility, this Agreement shall be deemed to grant consent to the Minister, and the provisions of this Agreement shall apply as the context requires to all subsequent Work undertaken by the Minister under this Clause 7.
Further work. If, subsequent to the initial work to be undertaken by Applicant for its facility, either Xxxxxxx County or Applicant desires to undertake any work in the crossing area, this Agreement shall be deemed to grant consent to that party, and the provisions of this Agreement shall apply mutatis mutandis to all subsequent work undertaken by either party. Notwithstanding the foregoing, installation of any facility other than those covered by this Agreement, shall require a separate crossing agreement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if emergency work is required by either party, that party shall commence the necessary work and shall forthwith give the other party’s field representative verbal notice of the emergency and necessary work, and shall forthwith give written notice hereof.
Further work. The nature and scale of planned further work (e.g. tests for lateral extensions or depth extensions or large-scale step-out drilling). • Diagrams clearly highlighting the areas of possible extensions, including the main geological interpretations and future drilling areas, provided this information is not commercially sensitive. • A range of exploration techniques are being considered to progress exploration including rock chip and soil sampling, geophysical surveying, and drilling.
Further work a. If, subsequent to the initial work to be undertaken by Applicant for its facility, either Xxxxxxx County or Applicant desires to undertake any work in the crossing area, this Agreement shall be deemed to grant consent to that party, and the provisions of this Agreement shall apply mutatis mutandis to all subsequent work undertaken by either party.
Further work. Considering future comparative surveys on similarities and differences among a larger group of countries Among other factors, the similarities and differences among countries are rooted in historical traditions of relations between education and employers, including established human resources and training practices and general qualification and legal frameworks. The EMCOSU project has given most attention to four EU transition countries – Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland and Slovenia – and Spain (“EMCOSU countries”) but has also considered other EU countries, particularly Croatia, Germany, France, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Italy, ex-Yugoslav countries, Sweden and Russia. The number of cases in the other countries was significantly lower than with the EMCOSU countries yet the consortium was able to develop a hypothesis on how certain countries can be different from all others. For example, it presumed that in Croatia, and the Czech and Slovak Republics research and development is less developed compared to other UBC factors relative to other countries under observation. Bureaucracy is not such a concern in Scandinavian countries. Italian companies do not consider that their universities need a practical orientation as much as elsewhere. The list of these insights stemming from different EU countries is long and requires further investigation. Employers’ associations have the potential to become stronger promoters of UBC The EMCOSU project shows that employers’ associations in some countries hold relatively limited systematic knowledge regarding UBC. However, at the same time the results indicate that the perspective of employers’ associations on UBC does not vary much from the employers’ side. Employers’ associations also cooperate in the mobility of students and research and development activities. Similarly to employers, they find bureaucracy and different motives and values to be the key barriers to cooperation and also complain that universities have a different perception of time horizons. In general, they believe that UBC should be oriented towards commercialisation and practical application. Based on the outcomes of the EMCOSU project, employers’ associations have good operational potential to become supporters of UBC – particularly in representing the interests of SMEs. If the political idea is that employers are expected to become a driver of UBC that is equal to universities, then special attention and support would have to be provided to support specia...
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Further work. The Parties have executed this Work Order by their respective duly authorized representatives on the dates identified below but the Work Order shall become effective on the Work Order Effective Date. CODEXIS, INC. (“Codexis”) By: Name: Title: Date: LACTOSAN GMBH & CO. KG (“Company”) By: Name: Title: Date: [*] Certain information in this document has been omitted and filed separately with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Confidential treatment has been requested with respect to the omitted portions. Exhibit 5.3 Form of Purchase Order Please see attached. [*] Certain information in this document has been omitted and filed separately with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Confidential treatment has been requested with respect to the omitted portions. Exhibit 5.4 Packaging Documentation (as provided by Codexis)
Further work. All terms and conditions of this Contract shall be applicable to any further work done or services provided for the Vessel now or in the future, whether under this Contract, or subsequential oral or written agreement or otherwise.
Further work. We consider this a first attempt to generalise the model presented in [6]. Firstly, we find qualitatively similar re- sults on the benefits in the long run of evaluating the risk using time average growth rates, which leaves the ques- tion of whether any non-trivial network structures lead to qualitatively different results open. Secondly, our spatial constraint reveals a decreased memory in wealth ranking. The question now is: How much does the temporal au- tocorrelation change if the neighbourhood of the agents is expanded or if the network structure is changed? And are there any configurations that lead to qualitatively different results? Lastly, we recognise that consumption is an important feature in real systems [37]. This leads to the possibility of bankruptcy, which in this model is equal to being erased from the system. We are aware of no solutions for dealing with such a problem on a non- ad-hoc basis, but we would be interested in discussing possible solutions. In general, we hope this paper will inspire researchers to explore the insurance problem fur- ther through the lens of time average considerations.
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