Ride Through Sample Clauses

Ride Through. Ride-Through requires that the resource continues to inject current within the "No Trip" zone of the voltage and frequency ride-through requirements. Unless approved during the Interconnection Requirements Study analysis, resources should not use "momentary cessation" within the ride-through regions for any of the ride-through requirements in this Attachment B (Facility Owned by Seller).
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
Ride Through. Ride-Through requires that the resource continues to inject current within the "No Trip" zone of the voltage and frequency ride-through requirements. Unless approved during the Interconnection Requirements Study analysis, resources should not use "momentary cessation" within the ride-through regions for any of the ride-through requirements in this Attachment B (Facility Owned by Seller). In the "may trip" regions, the Facility shall initiate trip for over/under voltage and frequency conditions only as required for Facility equipment operating limits to avoid damage. Any such limits of operation should be conveyed to the Company and represented in the provided models.
Ride Through. Ride-Through requires that the resource continues to operate and inject current within the "No Trip" zone of the voltage and frequency ride-through requirements.
Ride Through. “[T]he trustee may abandon property of the estate that is burdensome to the estate or that is of inconsequential value and benefit to the estate.”91 Section 521 requires a debtor to file “a statement of his intention with respect to the retention or surrender of [secured] property,” and perform his intention with respect to such property “within 30 days after the first date set for the meeting of creditors under section 341(a).”92 Accordingly, if such abandonment occurs, the debtor has three options, pursuant to statute, with regard to the collateral: “(i) surrender the property to the secured creditor, (ii) retain and redeem the property under section 722 by paying the secured creditor the full amount of the secured claim, . . . or (iii) retain the property and sign a reaffirmation agreement.”93 A fourth option, judicially-created, is to “retain the collateral and continue making loan payments in accordance with the original terms of the loan documents without a reaffirmation agreement.”94 This option is known as ride-through.95 This option is “not protected in the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the First, Fifth, Seventh, and Ninth Circuits, and the question is open in the Sixth and Eighth Circuits.”96 The BAPCPA amendments to Section 521(a)(2)(B) and additions of Section 521(a)(6) and Section 362(h) “attempt to halt the ‘ride-through’ option, and its language suggests that the debtor may not keep secured property without either reaffirming or redeeming the debt.”97 However, ride-through survived BAPCPA in two ways, according to Xxxx Xxxxxx: first, by means of a reaffirmation agreement that is not approved, and second, by default.98 An example of the first way is the case In re Xxxxxxx.99 There, the debtor timely filed her statement of intent and timely entered into the reaffirmation agreement with the secured creditor of her vehicle.100 The court did not find the reaffirmation agreement to be in the debtor’s best interest, but because the debtor had complied with §§ 521(a)(2) and (6), § 521(d), and 362(h), the debtor did not have to surrender possession of the vehicle.101 In a similar case, In re Moustafi, the Court held that a debtor’s vehicle reaffirmation agreement was not in the debtor’s best interest, because her expenses exceeded her income.102 There, the debtor complied with §§ 521(a)(2) and 362(h)(1) by filing her Statement of Intention and executing and filing the reaffirmation agreement.103 Despite disapproving the reaffirmation agreement, the Cour...

Related to Ride Through

  • Schedules etc References to this Agreement shall include any Recitals and Schedules to it and references to Clauses and Schedules are to Clauses of, and Schedules to, this Agreement. References to paragraphs and Parts are to paragraphs and Parts of the Schedules.

  • Aircraft Information Table Table 1 consolidates information contained in Articles 1, 2, 3 and 4 with respect to (i) quantity of Aircraft, (ii) applicable Detail Specification, (iii) month and year of scheduled deliveries, (iv) Aircraft Basic Price, (v) applicable escalation factors and (vi) Advance Payment Base Prices and advance payments and their schedules.

  • Compensation for Providing Information The Party requesting information agrees to reimburse the other Party for the reasonable costs, if any, of creating, gathering, copying, transporting and otherwise complying with the request with respect to such information (including any reasonable costs and expenses incurred in any review of information for purposes of protecting the Privileged Information of the providing Party or in connection with the restoration of backup media for purposes of providing the requested information). Except as may be otherwise specifically provided elsewhere in this Agreement, any Ancillary Agreement or any other agreement between the Parties, such costs shall be computed in accordance with the providing Party’s standard methodology and procedures.

  • Schedules; Exhibits; Integration Each schedule and exhibit delivered pursuant to the terms of this Agreement shall be in writing and shall constitute a part of this Agreement, although schedules need not be attached to each copy of this Agreement. This Agreement, together with such schedules and exhibits, constitutes the entire agreement among the parties pertaining to the subject matter hereof and supersedes all prior agreements and understandings of the parties in connection therewith.

  • Annexes The Annexes form an integral part of this Agreement.

Time is Money Join Law Insider Premium to draft better contracts faster.