Consequences of Mandatory Change Events Sample Clauses

Consequences of Mandatory Change Events. 15.3.3.1 If and to the extent that a Mandatory Change Event prevents the Supplier from achieving the relevant Guaranteed Completion Date, the Supplier shall be entitled to a Change Order extending the relevant Guaranteed Completion Date, as set out in clause 15.6 (Extensions of Time) (and/or such other relief from the Supplier's obligations as may be agreed between the Parties pursuant to clause 15.4 (Changes in Law) or 15.5 (Compensation Events) (if at all)).
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Related to Consequences of Mandatory Change Events

  • Consequences of an Event of Default (a) If an Event of Default specified in subsections (a) through (l), (o), (p) or (q) of Section 7.01 shall occur and, be continuing or shall exist, then, in addition to all other rights and remedies which the Administrative Agent or any Lender may have hereunder or under any other Loan Document, at law, in equity or otherwise, the Lenders shall be under no further obligation to make Loans hereunder, and the Administrative Agent may, and, upon the written request of the Required Lenders shall, by notice to the Borrower, from time to time do any or all of the following:

  • Consequences of Events of Default and Corrective Action If an Event of Default occurs, the Province may, at any time, take one or more of the following actions:

  • Default Events (a) Any material breach of the Funding Agreement by the Recipient, including those set out below, will be an event of default (“Default Event”):

  • Extraordinary Events No fault if failure due to an Extraordinary Event

  • Consequences of Force Majeure If the Affected Party has taken all necessary steps towards mitigating the effect of a Force Majeure event, then:

  • Termination Events This Agreement may, by notice given prior to or at the Closing, be terminated:

  • Consequences of Default Upon the occurrence of any Event of Default, as defined in the Revenue Sharing Agreement:

  • Consequences of Termination Upon the termination of this Agreement:

  • Regulatory Event New Taxes If, after the Effective Date, a Regulatory Event occurs or New Taxes are imposed, and such event or taxes have a direct, material and adverse effect on the economic benefits to a Party of this ESA, the affected Party shall send written notice to the other Party, setting forth the Regulatory Event or New Taxes and reasonably demonstrating the effect of the same on the affected Party. Upon delivery of such notice, the Parties shall use reasonable efforts to negotiate an amendment to this ESA to mitigate such effect. Alternatively, if as a direct result of such a Regulatory Event or New Taxes, the Competitive Supplier incurs additional, material costs, the Competitive Supplier shall provide a written notice to the Town that documents: a) the effective date of the Regulatory Event or New Taxes; b) a detailed explanation and reasonable demonstration of the material costs incurred as a result of the Regulatory Event or New Taxes; c) the timing of the cost impact to be incurred by the Competitive Supplier; d) the proposed price increase per kWh to be passed on to Participating Consumers; and e) a proposed plan for coordinating with the Local Distributor for an increase in the price per kWh that is billed by the Local Distributor, designed to reimburse the Competitive Supplier for such cost impact. If the Town and the Competitive supplier cannot agree on the amendment to this ESA or reimbursement contemplated by this section, the matter may be subject to dispute resolution in accordance with section 12.2. In no event shall a price change become effective without providing Participating Consumers with a 30-day advance notice of the price change.

  • Extraordinary Event Registry Operator will use commercially reasonable efforts to restore the critical functions of the registry within twenty-­‐four (24) hours after the termination of an extraordinary event beyond the control of the Registry Operator and restore full system functionality within a maximum of forty-­‐eight (48) hours following such event, depending on the type of critical function involved. Outages due to such an event will not be considered a lack of service availability.

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