By limiting a company's ability to conduct business, HUD's
regulations slow development of the one - stop shopping concept in real estate.
Not exact matches
The number of new gas and power connections in Western Australia fell in the year to June, an outcome of the
slowing property
development market, according to the Economic
Regulation Authority.
In addition, the altered rates of force
development and relaxation suggest alterations in the
regulation of intracellular calcium levels following maximal contractions, as are noted to occur in
slow skeletal muscles (44).
• Kyoto Protocol • EU ETS • Australian CO2 tax and ETS • Mandating and heavily subsidising ($ / TWh delivered) renewable energy • Masses of inappropriate
regulations that have inhibited the
development of nuclear power, made it perhaps five times more expensive now than it should be,
slowed its
development,
slowed its roll out, caused global CO2 emissions to be 10 % to 20 % higher now than they would otherwise have been, meaning we are on a much
slower trajectory to reduce emissions than we would be and, most importantly, we are locked in to fossil fuel electricity generation that causes 10 to 100 times more fatalities per TWh than would be the case if we allowed nuclear to develop (or perhaps 1000 times according to this: http://nextbigfuture.com/2011/03/deaths-per-twh-by-energy-source.html • Making building
regulations that effectively prevent people from selling, refurbishing or updating their houses if they are close to sea level (the damage to property values and to property owners» life savings is enormous as many examples in Australia are already demonstrating.
The second thing to do is to reform and streamline
regulations that
slow down the
development of green technologies.
These models emphasize the combination of a rapid increase in motivation for reward and sensations seeking, and
slow development of self -
regulation to explain increases in adolescent risk behavior, including substance use.
The panelists also discussed the importance of looking at current zoning
regulations in major cities and how those
regulations could be
slowing down the
development of walkable places.
Such
regulations could impede the further
development of the CMBS market and potentially
slow the number of deals for commercial practitioners.