Examples of Industrial Minerals Operations in a sentence
On the hand, cumulative customer satisfaction refer to an overall assessment based on the experience of total purchase and consumption of a product or service over time (Anderson et al., 1994), which sounds more practical and functional than the transaction-specific satisfaction in forecasting a customer’s consequent behavior and a firms overall performance over time.
The Parties’ obligations under and relating to Section 2.3 will terminate if the Trust sells or otherwise disposes of all or substantially all of the Industrial Minerals Operations to a non-affiliated third party, in which case the provisions of Section 6.5 will apply in respect of the services contemplated in Section 2.3 only.
The EVC Partnership and a predecessor to Fording Amalco are parties to the 2003 Administrative and Industrial Minerals Services Agreement pursuant to which the EVC Partnership agreed to provide personnel and administrative services to the predecessor and to provide services in respect of the Industrial Minerals Operations.
Pursuant to the Arrangement, Fording transferred its metallurgical coal and other assets (including the assets purchased from Luscar, but excluding the Industrial Minerals Operations) and Teck transferred its Elkview mine and other metallurgical coal assets into the Partnership that is owned 65% by the Fund and 35% by Teck.
Counsel has no obligation to raise futile or frivolous objections and cannot be held unconstitutionally ineffective for failing to make such objections.
It is the intention of the Parties that services provided hereunder by the Partnership in respect of the Industrial Minerals Operations be provided on a cost reimbursement basis so that the Partnership neither makes a profit nor suffers a loss from the provision of such services.
The Corporation has three operating segments: Mountain Operations, Prairie Operations and Industrial Minerals Operations.
New Fording shall reimburse the Partnership for all reasonable costs and expenses incurred by the Partnership in providing executive personnel pursuant to Section 2.1, to the extent, and only to the extent, that such personnel are engaged in the Industrial Minerals Operations, including a reasonable allocation of Employment Costs of such personnel, together with a reasonable allocation of overhead costs of the Partnership relating to those services consistent with the historical practice of Fording.