Project Objectives. 1.1 (Type the Project objectives)
Project Objectives. This project intends to improve living conditions in the rapidly growing Guwahati area, by providing new water supply facilities. The main objective of Japanese loan assistance is to support India in establishing physical infrastructure to boost and sustain economic growth. At the same time, Japanese assistance seeks to support India’s efforts to alleviate poverty. In keeping with these goals, the loan package strategically covers this water supply project.
Project Objectives. The EMI project addresses the call objective INFRA-2010-1.
Project Objectives. With this deliverable, the project has contributed to the achievement of the following objectives (DOA, Part B Section 1.1) WP numbers are in brackets: No. Objective Yes No A To develop a new generation of global high-resolution climate models. (3, 4, 6) X B To develop new strategies and tools for evaluating global high- resolution climate models at a process level, and for quantifying the uncertainties in the predictions of regional climate. (1, 2, 5, 9, 10) X C To provide new high-resolution protocols and flagship simulations for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP)’s Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6) project, to inform the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessments and in support of emerging Climate Services. (4, 6, 9) X D To explore the scientific and technological frontiers of capability in global climate modelling to provide guidance for the development of future generations of prediction systems, global climate and Earth System models (informing post-CMIP6 and beyond). (3, 4) X E To advance understanding of past and future, natural and anthropogenic, drivers of variability and changes in European climate, including high impact events, by exploiting new capabilities in high-resolution global climate modelling. (1, 2, 5) X F To produce new, more robust and trustworthy projections of European climate for the next few decades based on improved global models and advances in process understanding. (2, 3, 5, 6, 10) X G To engage with targeted end-user groups in key European economic sectors to strengthen their competitiveness, growth, resilience and ability by exploiting new scientific progress. (10, 11) X H To establish cooperation between science and policy actions at European and international level, to support the development of effective climate change policies, optimize public decision making and increase capability to manage climate risks. (5, 8, 10) X
Project Objectives. The SHIWA project's main goal is to leverage existing workflow based solutions and enable cross-workflow and inter-workflow exploitation of DCIs by applying both coarse- and fine-grained strategies. The coarse-grained (CG) approach enables to combine workflows written in different workflow languages in order to reuse existing reuse and combine existing workflow applications written in various workflow languages. The CG approach treats existing workflows as black box systems that can be incorporated into other workflow applications as workflow nodes. The fine-grained approach addresses language interoperability by defining an intermediate representation to be used for translation of workflows across various systems (ASKALON, Pegasus, P-Grade, MOTEUR, Xxxxxx). SHIWA develops, deploys and operates the SHIWA Simulation Platform to offer users production-level services supporting workflow interoperability following both approaches. As part of the SHIWA Simulation Platform the SHIWA Repository facilitates publishing and sharing workflows, and the SHIWA Portal enables their actual enactment. Use cases targeting various scientific domains will serve to drive and evaluate this platform from a user's perspective. Members are from MTA SZTAKI: Technical Coordinator and NA2 Leader: Xxxxx Xxxxx <xxxxxxx@xxxxxx.xx> Rights and Responsibilities GENERAL
Project Objectives. The Borrower has represented that the Loan will permit the Borrower to complete the Project in accordance with Exhibit V, including, but not limited to, reviewing investment opportunities and performing due diligence on investment candidates to make investments pursuant to the Program requirements in the focus areas of Advanced Materials related to advanced polymers, ceramics, composites, carbon fibers and nanotubes, and specialty metals and alloys; Agriculture and Food Technologies; Aerospace & Aviation; Energy and Energy Storage; Medical Technology related to diagnostics, imaging, surgical instruments/equipment, implant devices, therapeutics, and regenerative medicine; Sensing and Automation Technologies; Software Applications for business and healthcare.
Project Objectives. The objective of each of the Projects (each, a “Project Objective”, and collectively, the “Project Objectives”) is described in Annex I.
Project Objectives. With this deliverable, the project has contributed to the achievement of the following objectives (DOA, Part B Section 1.1) WP numbers are in brackets: No. Objective Yes No
Project Objectives. The proposed Network of Excellence (XXX) will provide the first comprehensive pan-European food information resource, using state-of-the-art database linking, to allow effective management, updating, extending and comparability. This is of fundamental importance to the Food Quality and Safety Priority and is an essential underpinning component of all food and health research in Europe. The network has FIVE strategic objectives:
1. Strengthen scientific and technological excellence in food composition databank systems by integrating at the European level the xxxxxxxx xxxx of resources and expertise needed to provide European leadership in this field and establish itself as a world force in this area.
2. Identify and provide new information for missing data for nutrients and biologically active compounds with putative health effects, and covering all food groups including traditional, Ethnic minority, novel, high-added value and prepared foods.
3. Spread excellence and enhance the impact of the network in food composition databanks and public health nutrition beyond the boundaries of the partnership through training, and sharing of methods and facilities.
4. Communicate with, and enter into dialogue with all user and stakeholder groups, in order to establish and deliver user and stakeholder requirements for sustainable and durable food databank systems.
5. Disseminate and exploit new scientific and technological knowledge in order to strengthen the competitiveness of the European food industry, including SMEs, aiming to help the European food and nutrition industry to grow into knowledge–based industry, targeted at evidence based healthier food production. In achieving its principal objectives, EuroFIR will operate along four Horizontal Platforms: Integration (IA), Joint Research (RA), Spreading of Excellence (SA) and Management (MA), each with a number of activities grouped under workpackages (WPs). The specific objectives are designed in a measurable and verifiable form and will be met though the Joint programme of Activities (JPA) as set out in the following table:
1: Deliverables: ⮚ Helpdesk operational (M3) ⮚ Report on audit (M12) ⮚ Release IT systems manual (M12) ⮚ Release updated IT manual (M18)
Project Objectives. The Program consists of the projects described in Annex I (each a “Project” and collectively, the “Projects”). The objective of each of the Projects (each a “Project Objective” and collectively, the “Project Objectives”) is to:
(a) Increase electricity consumption by facilitating power trade and by improving the availability and reliability of electricity supply in Nepal’s electricity grid; and by facilitating power trade, and
(b) Maintain road quality across the strategic road network.