Betekenis van:
ailing
ailing
Bijvoeglijk naamwoord
- somewhat ill or prone to illness
"my poor ailing grandmother"
Synoniemen
Werkwoord
Voorbeeldzinnen
- Rescue or restructuring aid to ailing firms is currently governed by the Guidelines.
- BNFL is an ailing undertaking which survives only with the benefit of State aid;
- It serves to keep an ailing firm afloat for the time needed to work out a restructuring or liquidation plan.
- The fact that an ailing firm is located in an assisted area does not, however, justify a permissive approach to aid for restructuring.
- Its primary objective is to make it possible to keep an ailing firm afloat for the time needed to work out a restructuring or liquidation plan.
- The Commission has examined whether Measure B confers an advantage on BE that no private operator would have conceded to this ailing firm in similar circumstances.
- Rescue and restructuring aid to ailing companies is currently governed by the Community guidelines on State aid for rescuing and restructuring firms in difficulty [12] (the New Guidelines), which replaced the previous text adopted in 1999 [13] (the 1999 Guidelines).
- Rescue and restructuring aid to ailing companies is currently governed by the Community guidelines on state aid for rescuing and restructuring firms in difficulty (‘new guidelines’), which replaced the previous text adopted in 1999 (‘1999 guidelines’).
- This does not, however, mean that the Authority will have a permissive approach to aid for the re-structuring of ailing firms located in assisted areas to help a region prop up companies artificially.
- Rescue and restructuring aid to ailing companies is currently regulated by the Community Guidelines on State aid for rescuing and restructuring firms in difficulty [30] (hereinafter Guidelines), which replaced the previous text adopted in 1999 [31] (hereinafter 1999 Guidelines).
- Rescue and restructuring aid to ailing companies is currently regulated by the Community Guidelines on State aid for rescuing and restructuring firms in difficulty [43] (the Guidelines), which replaced the previous text adopted in 1999 [44] (the 1999 Guidelines).
- The 1999 guidelines made a distinction between rescue aid and restructuring aid, whereby rescue aid was defined as temporary assistance to keep an ailing firm afloat for the time needed to work out a restructuring and/or a liquidation plan.
- The fact that an ailing firm is located in an assisted area does not, however, justify a permissive approach to aid for restructuring: in the medium to long term it does not help a region to prop up companies artificially.
- According to the guidelines, a rescue aid is by nature temporary and reversible assistance, and its primary objective is to make it possible to keep an ailing firm afloat for the time needed to work out a restructuring or liquidation plan.
- Rescue aid within the meaning of the Community guidelines is, by nature, temporary. It serves to keep an ailing firm afloat for the time needed to work out a restructuring or liquidation plan. It must be restricted to the amount needed to keep the firm in business until the restructuring plan has been drawn up (e.g. covering wage and salary costs or routine supplies).