Euro 4 definition
Examples of Euro 4 in a sentence
Subscription to the site provides access to technical information relating to PIAGGIO GROUP Euro 4 type-approved vehicles onwards, calculating any taxes, where applicable.
The minimum current standard is Euro 4 (2006 registration) unless otherwise specified by Contracting Authorities at Competition stage.
It will have a 300,000-barrel per day refinery to supply the petrochemical complex, as well as producing a host of refined petroleum products, including gasoline and diesel that meet the Euro 4 and Euro 5 fuel specifications.
The repayment of Euro 4 billion was a stunning blow to the population of over 300,000.
The original acquisition costs for the Repurchase Shares of Arcom were approximately Euro 4 million, equal to part of the consideration paid by the Group to acquire Distech Controls S.A.S. and ▇▇▇▇▇▇ S.A.S., both of which are subsidiaries of the Group as at the date of this announcement, from Arcom to enable the Group’s presence and market share in Europe.
In each calendar year, CIBA Vision agrees to sell the following minimum amounts of the Licensed Products: Year Minimum Net Sales Revenues ---- -------------------------- 2000 No Minimum Sales 2001 Euro 2 million 2002 Euro 4 million 2003 Euro 5 million Thereafter Euro 5 million in each calendar year.
They shook the foundations of the government, went after the bankers who led them into bankruptcy and said ‘No’ in a referendum on repaying debts of some Euro 4 billion to Great Britain and the Netherlands.
All vehicles purchased for use on this Contract shall be as ‘environmentally friendly’ as practicable and as a minimum meet the Euro 4 standard for exhaust emissions and be capable of retro-fitting with new technology developed to reduce or clean emissions further.
Consideration: To secure the original equity investment of around Euro 4 Million (in Reunite) three years ago, HE issued a bankers guarantee (to Reunite) in the amount of USD 500,000, that was collected immediately.
When we look at how, in the 21st century, nation states should accommodate themselves to the blistering forces of globalisation, the world’s oldest democracy, small as it is, has lessons for all of us.” Iceland had agreed on 18 August 2009 with the British and Dutch governments to repay almost Euro 4 billion lost in a failed Icelandic bank by 2024, paving the way for more I.M.F. aid as it struggled to restructure its economy after the dramatic economic crashed in 2008.