Common use of Production Readiness Plan Clause in Contracts

Production Readiness Plan. The degree of detail in the plan should be proportional to the complexity of producing or commercializing the proposed product, and to its state of development. As appropriate, the plan will discuss the following: o Critical production processes, equipment, facilities, personnel resources, and support systems needed to produce a commercially viable product. o Internal manufacturing facilities, supplier technologies, capacity constraints imposed by the design under consideration, design-critical elements, and the use of hazardous or non-recyclable materials. The product manufacturing effort may include “proof of production processes.” o The estimated cost of production. o The expected investment threshold needed to launch the commercial product. o An implementation plan to ramp up to full production. o The outcome of product development efforts, such as copyrights and license agreements. o Patent numbers and applications, along with dates and brief descriptions. o Other areas as determined by the CAM. Products: • Production Readiness Plan (draft and final)

Appears in 5 contracts

Samples: www.energy.ca.gov, www.energy.ca.gov, www.energy.ca.gov

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Production Readiness Plan. The degree of detail in the plan should be proportional to the complexity of producing or commercializing the proposed product, and to its state of development. As appropriate, the plan will discuss the following: o Critical production processes, equipment, facilities, personnel resources, and support systems needed to produce a commercially viable product. o Internal manufacturing facilities, supplier technologies, capacity constraints imposed by the design under consideration, design-critical elements, and the use of hazardous or non-recyclable materials. The product manufacturing effort may include “proof of production processes.” o The estimated cost of production. o The expected investment threshold needed to launch the commercial product. o An implementation plan to ramp up to full production. o The outcome of product development efforts, such as copyrights and license agreements. o Patent numbers and applications, along with dates and brief descriptions. o Other areas as determined by the CAM. Products: • Production Readiness Plan (draft and final).

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: www.energy.ca.gov

Production Readiness Plan. The degree of detail in the plan should be proportional to the complexity of producing or commercializing the proposed product, and to its state of development. As appropriate, the plan will discuss the following: o Critical production processes, equipment, facilities, personnel resources, and support systems needed to produce a commercially viable product. o Internal manufacturing facilities, supplier technologies, capacity constraints imposed by the design under consideration, design-critical elements, and the use of hazardous or non-recyclable materials. The product manufacturing effort may include “proof of production processes.” o The estimated cost of production. o The expected investment threshold needed to launch the commercial product. o An implementation plan to ramp up to full production. o The outcome of product development efforts, such as copyrights and license agreements. o Patent numbers and applications, along with dates and brief descriptions. o Other areas as determined by the CAM. Products: • Production Readiness Plan (draft and draft) (D701) • Production Readiness Plan (final) (D702)

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: www.energy.ca.gov

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Production Readiness Plan. The degree of detail in the plan should be proportional to the complexity of producing or commercializing the proposed product, and to its state of development. As appropriate, the plan will discuss the following: o Critical production processes, equipment, facilities, personnel resources, and support systems needed to produce a commercially viable product. o Internal manufacturing facilities, supplier technologies, capacity constraints imposed by the design under consideration, design-critical elements, and the use of hazardous or non-recyclable materials. The product manufacturing effort may include “proof of production processes.” o The estimated cost of production. o The expected investment threshold needed to launch the commercial product. o An implementation plan to ramp up to full production. o The outcome of product development efforts, such as copyrights and license agreements. o Patent numbers and applications, along with dates and brief descriptions. o Other areas as determined by the CAM. Products: • Production Readiness Plan (draft and finalDraft) (D801) • Production Readiness Plan (Final) (D802)

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: www.energy.ca.gov

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