Sentences with phrase «unanticipated problems in»

Some scientists continue to express worries that the berms were ineffective and might cause unanticipated problems in the gulf.

Not exact matches

Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially are the following: (1) worldwide economic, political, and capital markets conditions and other factors beyond the Company's control, including natural and other disasters or climate change affecting the operations of the Company or its customers and suppliers; (2) the Company's credit ratings and its cost of capital; (3) competitive conditions and customer preferences; (4) foreign currency exchange rates and fluctuations in those rates; (5) the timing and market acceptance of new product offerings; (6) the availability and cost of purchased components, compounds, raw materials and energy (including oil and natural gas and their derivatives) due to shortages, increased demand or supply interruptions (including those caused by natural and other disasters and other events); (7) the impact of acquisitions, strategic alliances, divestitures, and other unusual events resulting from portfolio management actions and other evolving business strategies, and possible organizational restructuring; (8) generating fewer productivity improvements than estimated; (9) unanticipated problems or delays with the phased implementation of a global enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, or security breaches and other disruptions to the Company's information technology infrastructure; (10) financial market risks that may affect the Company's funding obligations under defined benefit pension and postretirement plans; and (11) legal proceedings, including significant developments that could occur in the legal and regulatory proceedings described in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10 - K for the year ended Dec. 31, 2017, and any subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10 - Q (the «Reports»).
As the ACA, itself, demonstrated, trying to implement change of this scope and complexity in a single step leads to unanticipated problems.
But the secrecy rules imposed in the laws governing the commission are causing some unanticipated problems.
As Karen DeWitt reports, the secrecy rules imposed in the laws governing the commission are causing some unanticipated problems.
The unanticipated, negative outcomes that can follow when non-native species enter naive populations — such as the now pestilential Kudzu (Pueraria lobata), a legume native to Japan that was introduced into the southern U.S. during the late 19th century — might not apply in the same way with a bioaugmentation approach to the chytrid problem.
Influenza remains a major health problem in the United States, resulting each year in an estimated 36,000 deaths and 200,000 hospitalizations.4 Those who have been shown to be at high risk for the complications of influenza infection are children 6 to 23 months of age; healthy persons 65 years of age or older; adults and children with chronic diseases, including asthma, heart and lung disease, and diabetes; residents of nursing homes and other long - term care facilities; and pregnant women.4 It is for this reason that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has recommended that these groups, together with health care workers and others with direct patient - care responsibilities, should be given priority for influenza vaccination this season in the face of the current shortage.1 Other high - priority groups include children and teenagers 6 months to 18 years of age whose underlying medical condition requires the daily use of aspirin and household members and out - of - home caregivers of infants less than 6 months old.1 Hence, in the case of vaccine shortages resulting either from the unanticipated loss of expected supplies or from the emergence of greater - than - expected global influenza activity — such as pandemic influenza, which would prompt a greater demand for vaccination5 — the capability of extending existing vaccine supplies by using alternative routes of vaccination that would require smaller doses could have important public health implications.
NASA restructured the project in 2011 and developed a new cost estimate that included robust cost and schedule reserves to respond to unanticipated problems — «unknown unknowns» — that occur in many technology development programs.
(Unanticipated problems may occur because owners sometimes omit information when they surrender an animal, and of course we have no information on animals that come in as strays other than what we observe at the Shelter.)
Sixth, we complete the project — as planned, on deadline and budget (hopefully)-- and meet as a team one final time to discuss any unanticipated problems or issues that arose and how we can prepare and better address them in the future.
In assessing videotaped observations, we recognized an unanticipated problem (ie, that parents might have learned to master the challenges presented over repeated assessments and that negative behaviors would therefore become increasingly rare).
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