Examples of Renewable energy infrastructure in a sentence
Add new text as follows:SECTION R404ELECTRICAL POWER AND LIGHTING SYSTEMSR404.4 Renewable energy infrastructure.
Renewable energy infrastructure means land, real estate and onshore or offshore facilities that are principally used or intended for use in the production, transmission, distribution and storage of energy based on renewable energy sources.
The Protocol sets out a focus for the use of neighbourhood CIL as below and subject to the project according with a number of principles: • Open space improvements/small scale leisure; • Local highway improvement projects; • Air quality; • Community improvements; • Renewable energy infrastructure; • Economic support; and • Other measures which help to mitigate the impact the development has on the area.
Renewable energy infrastructure has higher labour intensity during the construction and manufacturing phase.
Ineligible costs include (but are not limited to):- Labor,- Administration,- Fringe benefits,- Printing and supplies,- Office equipment,- Acquisition of real estate property,- Travel,- Acquisition of permits,- Landscaping,- Renewable energy infrastructure (solar, wind, geothermal, etc.), or- Energy efficiency projects.Operations and maintenance costs of new or existing infrastructure and/or equipment are not eligible for funding.
Defendant’s Third Ordinance prohibited all billboards within the Township, and defined billboards as: “A sign which directs attention to a business, commodity, service, entertainment or attraction sold, offered, or existing elsewhere than upon the same premises where such sign is displayed or only incidentally sold, offered, or existing upon such premises.” Exhibit F, § 144-5.
Where a local manufacturer is converted into a contract or toll manufacturer or where a full-fledged research operation is converted into contract research, the converted local entity will not, in general, have an authority to conclude contracts with third parties.
DEP must suspend or revoke permits as a matter of course, as a frequently used enforcement tool.
Renewable energy infrastructure can be purely a public asset if the infrastructure is developed through a special allocation budget (DAK) or MEMR’s budget through a state budget scheme.
Renewable energy infrastructure requirements cannot be quantified at this stage but the identification of Daresbury as an Energy Priority Zone87 in CS19: Sustainable Development and Climate Change suggests that the potential for decentralised renewable and low carbon technologies should be pursued to boost the long term sustainability of the site.