BOLIVIA Sample Clauses

BOLIVIA. There are no country-specific provisions. BRAZIL
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
BOLIVIA. There are no country-specific provisions. BRAZIL Compliance with Law By accepting this option, the Employee acknowledges that he or she agrees to comply with applicable Brazilian laws and pay any and all applicable taxes associated with the exercise of this option, the receipt of any dividends, and the sale of shares of common stock acquired under the Plan.
BOLIVIA. Dr. Luis Fernando Leanes, Calle 18 No. 8022, Edificio Parque 18 Piso 2 y 3, Zona Calacoto, La Paz, Bolivia, phone (591–2) 297–9730 / fax 297–1146, e-mail: pwrbol@bol.ops-oms.org, xxxx://xxx.xxx.xxx.xx.
BOLIVIA. There are no country-specific provisions. BRAZIL Compliance with Law By accepting this option, the Participant acknowledges that he or she agrees to comply with applicable Brazilian laws and pay any and all applicable taxes associated with the exercise of this option, the receipt of any dividends, and the sale of shares of Common Stock acquired under the Plan. Labor Law Acknowledgment By accepting the Award, the Participant agrees that (i) the Participant is making an investment decision; (ii) the shares of Common Stock will be issued to Participant only if the vesting and/or performance conditions are met, and (iii) the value of the underlying shares of Common Stock is not fixed and may increase or decrease in value over without compensation to the Participant.
BOLIVIA. There are no country-specific provisions. BRAZIL Compliance with Law By accepting this option, the Participant acknowledges that he or she agrees to comply with applicable Brazilian laws and pay any and all applicable taxes associated with the exercise of this option, the receipt of any dividends, and the sale of shares of Common Stock acquired under the Plan. Labor Law Acknowledgment By accepting the Award, the Participant agrees that (i) the Participant is making an investment decision; (ii) the shares of Common Stock will be issued to Participant only if the vesting and/or performance conditions are met, and (iii) the value of the underlying shares of Common Stock is not fixed and may increase or decrease in value over the Restricted Period without compensation to the Participant. Exchange Control Information If the Participant is resident or domiciled in Brazil, he or she will be required to submit annually a declaration of assets and rights held outside of Brazil to the Central Bank of Brazil if the aggregate value of such assets and rights is equal to or greater than US$100,000. Assets and rights that must be reported include shares of Common Stock. Tax on Financial Transaction (IOF) Payments to foreign countries and repatriation of funds into Brazil (including payment of the exercise price and proceeds from the sale) and the conversion of USD into BRL associated with such fund transfers may be subject to the Tax on Financial Transactions. It is the Participant's responsibility to comply with any applicable Tax on Financial Transactions arising from participation in the Plan. CANADA
BOLIVIA. There are no country-specific provisions. BRAZIL Compliance with Law By accepting the Award, the Participant acknowledges that he or she agrees to comply with applicable Brazilian laws and pay any and all applicable taxes associated with the vesting of the RSUs, the conversion of the RSUs into shares or the receipt of an equivalent cash payment, the receipt of any dividends, and the sale of shares of Common Stock acquired under the Plan.
BOLIVIA. Extradition Treaty signed at La Paz June 27, 1995; Transmitted by the President of the United States of America to the Senate October 10, 1995 (Treaty Doc. 104-22, 104th Congress, 1st Session); Reported favorably by the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations July 24, 1996 (Senate Executive Report No. 104-31, 104th Congress, 2d Session); Advice and consent to ratification by the Senate August 2, 1996; Ratified by the President November 4, 1996; Exchange of instruments of ratification at Washington November 21, 1996; Entered into force November 21, 1996.
AutoNDA by SimpleDocs
BOLIVIA. The high plateau will be the scene of bloody battles for the independence where Bolivar and Sucre are the principal actors. In 1825, the country achieved its independence and the following year Argentina recognizes the independence of that country.
BOLIVIA. Vice Ministries and Prefectures as sectorial and regional heads. • Non Governmental Organisations. • Private Companies. • International Cooperation institutions. • CINER (Information Center on Renewable Energies). • El SISER- Integrated Evaluation System according to Results, dependant on the Ministry of Sustainable Development. It has information referring to the comparisons between Plans and Goals of Ministries and Vice Ministries. PARAGUAY • Vice Ministry of Mines and Energy. • ANDE (National Administration of Electricity). • Governments and Municipalities. • Non Government Organizations. • Foundations. • INTN (National Institute of Technology and Normalization). • ESENERG (Energy Strategies for Sustainable Development). • Enterprises. • International Cooperation Agencies. Options for units of measure Planning and Monitoring Program implementation (and M&E) will generally need data on regional/localised energy resources/ access to electricity/ usage of energy resources/ budgets and finance/targets/achievements. Evaluation The type/ sources/ quality of data made available during the program formulation and implementation. Issues and problems associated with the input In Bolivia: Availability of information (or lack of) on energy and energy technologies. Look at accuracy, adequacy of data and build up range during the monitoring phase. In Paraguay: Lack of data on some energy and technological aspects, end uses of energy Technologies, lack of accurate data particularly in biomass (firewood). M&E solution to the issues/problem • To promote and to motivate institutions to generate, gather and systematize information at all levels: Prefectures, municipalities, programs, projects and non Government Organizations.
BOLIVIA. Day one 8/11 (La Paz): • Interviews with USAID (2 hours) : 14h00-16h00 (Xxxxxxxx&Xxxxx) Day two 9/11 (La Paz): • Commodity inspection (3 hours) (Xxxxx & Xxxxxxxx) • Focus group Interview with commodity management staff (2 hours) (Xxxx, Xxxxx & Xxxxxxxx) Day three 10/11 (La Paz) • Focus group interview with National and regional management (Xxxxx, Xxxxxxxx & Xxxx) • Collection of other outstanding information (Xxxxxxxx) Day four 11/11 (Cochabamba): • A sample of 30 community based staff (all areas health and agric.) complete the questionnaire and their supervisors (1/2-1 hour max) (Xxxxxxxx) Analysis of their responses (1 hour) (Xxxxx & Xxxxxxxx) • Semi-structured group interviews with supervisors • Semi-structured group interviews with sample of 30 community Level Staff & their supervisors (2 hrs) (Xxxxxxxx, Xxxxx & Xxxx) Day five 12/11 (Cochabamba): • Field visit: team split : three communities; attend training of two groups in each village; have short interview with attendees and give feedback to trainers. (Xxxx, Xxxxx and Xxxxxxxx)
Time is Money Join Law Insider Premium to draft better contracts faster.