depletable การใช้
- Long term, that's a depletable resource, but wind is not.
- The hospital and Medicaid agency are blameless, and should neither be stuck with the bills nor forced to accept reimbursement from depletable funds.
- The body of the player character houses an exchangeable ( and depletable ) battery that powers various body functions put there by the experimenters.
- Its home range may be large in order to provide a sufficient amount of easily depletable fruit and prey foraging sites over the long term.
- Since the Trust's assets are considered a depletable resource, its dividend payments are not taxed at the regular dividend rate, but rather as return of capital instead of return on investment.
- Potentially these individual energy source " are " renewable " : they harness the energy of sun, wind, water, or farm and forestry wastes, rather than that of depletable fuels ".
- Just one cent for every dollar's worth of oil, gas, sulfur, coal, copper, silver, gold, uranium-- those commercially valuable but depletable things that God put under our common earth.
- Since Pengrowth's assets are considered a depletable resource, its dividend payments are not taxed at the regular dividend rate, but rather as return of capital instead of return on investment; this is an additional tax advantage in the United States, and applies to all royalty trusts.
- Since the Trust's assets are considered a depletable resource, its dividend payments are not taxed at the regular dividend rate, but rather as return of capital instead of return on investment; this is an additional tax advantage in the United States, and applies to all royalty trusts.
- The second part was not addressed at all-could someone answer it ? ( About depletable / refillable energy carriers for the world economy akin to a biological ATP / ADP energy carrier analogue . ) Please assume infinite energy is available at a single point on Earth only, and all these'atp'analogues have to be routed there to be recharged . what would work in practice?
- He wrote, " Trees do not grow into the sky---they would perish in a high wind; and a single truth, like a single tax, ends in its own destruction . " Commons uses the natural soil fertility and value of forests as an example of this destruction, arguing that a tax on the in situ value of those depletable natural resources can result in overuse or over-extraction.