The former banker who became a whistle-blower, triggering a massive investigation of the Swiss bank. |
|
She would rather have to repay the bank than borrow from her parents and have to repay them. |
|
The larger bank remained the controlling party when it took over the smaller banks. |
|
Since then he has been a harsh critic of clumsy bank policies and argued that no one should be able to do what he did. |
|
In some countries a central bank, through its subsidiaries, controls and monitors the banking sector. |
|
Central bank legislation will enshrine specific procedures for selecting and appointing the head of the central bank. |
|
Then our minibus overheated and blew its engine, stranding us at Vioolsdrif, a dorpie on the northern bank of the Orange River. |
|
The literature on central bank independence has defined a number of types of independence. |
|
You must endorse the check before you deposit it in the bank. |
|
German bank officials in Darmstadt are transferring money in a new antiholdup bank van that carries a vat of dye in the top. |
|
I hid my books in the long grass near the ashpit at the end of the garden where nobody ever came and hurried along the canal bank. |
|
Somebody never pays his loans, yet he has the audacity to ask the bank for money. |
|
Envy is as the sunbeams that beat hotter upon a bank, or steep rising ground, than upon a flat. |
|
The tram was out of service during the early part of 2014 due to an electrical problem but returned in time for the August bank holiday. |
|
Additional taxpayer funding came from the European Regional Development Fund and bank lending. |
|
Our bank does a nightly sweep of accounts, to adjust the float so we stay within our reserves limit. |
|
The Virgin Islands as part of the Puerto Rican bank are sometimes included with the Greater Antilles. |
|
Accordingly she visits the witch, Dipsas, by whose magic aid the youth, found resting on a bank of lunary, is bewitched to sleep until old age. |
|
After some hours of intense work, we had macheted a path through the jungle to the bank of the river. |
|
She illegally siphoned money out of other people's bank accounts. |
|
|
An independent central bank will score higher in the review than one that is not independent. |
|
The MFA targets students who wish to start a career as an analyst in an investment bank or who wish to work in consulting. |
|
A public latrine consisted of a bank of seats situated over a channel of running water. |
|
By 1398 the mill had been relocated to just outside the eastern castle walls, on the west bank of the River Avon. |
|
When bank fired the loan originator, they recovered the last two years of her bonuses under the malus clause in her contract. |
|
An earthen bank could be piled behind a castle's curtain wall to absorb some of the shock of impact. |
|
The officer was given half a bottle of port and the right to invite a friend or two to dinner in the bank. |
|
The merchants lived and plied their trade at the Steelyard, a complex of warehouses, offices, and dwellings on the north bank of the Thames. |
|
In Britain, the friendly society, building society, and mutual savings bank were earlier forms of similar institutions. |
|
In this, a bank or lending agency has a collection of accounts of varying value and risk. |
|
They have to move out of their house because the bank foreclosed on their mortgage. |
|
When they arrived in Yokohama, Japan, they discovered that their bank, The New Oriental Banking Corporation, had failed. |
|
He had many computers in his house, with a bank of six monitors rigged up to ease writing. |
|
The couple had left England when Arthur was promoted to head the Bloemfontein office of the British bank for which he worked. |
|
The bank robbery was recorded by surveillance video cameras. |
|
The events take place simultaneously on the Friday, Saturday and Sunday of the August bank holiday weekend, sharing the same bill. |
|
It's just like withdrawing a billion dollars and putting it into your personal bank accounts. |
|
Alice and the other animals convene on the bank and the question among them is how to get dry again. |
|
Alice leaves her sister on the bank to imagine all the curious happenings for herself. |
|
In 1979 with funding from a Japanese bank a large modern extension was opened that would also house larger income generating exhibitions. |
|
|
The club turned professional in 1936, and work began on the first bank of terracing at the north end of the pitch. |
|
The metropolitan area of Lima accounts for 43 per cent of gross domestic product, for four-fifths of bank credit and consumer goods production. |
|
He was brought up at Long White Cloud house on the right bank of the River Thames. |
|
The door fronted on a narrow run, like a footbridge over a gully, that filled the gap between the house wall and the edge of the bank. |
|
In the 1790s a racecourse, printing press, bank and coffee house all opened, and Cardiff gained a stagecoach service to London. |
|
Bank Street in the city centre referred to the river bank and Bridge Street was named for the site of an early Farset bridge. |
|
The first of the tables below lists the member entities and their heads of government, finance ministers and central bank governors. |
|
During stage one, which began on January 1 and is still underway, the bank has circulated 1 and 5 Manat notes and all the Gapik coins. |
|
By the far bank a knot of men, one of them wearing a green gaungbaung, were waiting beside a sampan. |
|
He entered Milan on 2 June and by crossing to the South bank of the Po completely cut Melas's communications. |
|
These accounts were frozen due to the inability for foreign countries to pay their debts back to the bank. |
|
By the end of November, Kalewa had been recaptured, and several bridgeheads were established on the east bank of the Chindwin. |
|
The book attributed inflation to excess money supply generated by a central bank. |
|
It attributed deflationary spirals to the reverse effect of a failure of a central bank to support the money supply during a liquidity crunch. |
|
Let it be no bank or common stock, but every man be master of his own money. |
|
The policy is a long-standing gentlemen’s agreement under which the IMF managing director is a European and the World Bank president is an American. |
|
Plan was to clean the bank, ghost the mercs, break wide through the tunnel. |
|
In countries that accepted the gold standard, currency could be exchanged at a bank for a fixed weight of gold. |
|
I heard them on the other bank, and then saw a man on a horse crossing the river, and went to ground like a jackal. |
|
The bank of clouds on the horizon announced the arrival of the predicted storm front. |
|
|
The Bank of England, founded in 1694 by Scottish banker William Paterson, is the United Kingdom's central bank. |
|
The bank has a monopoly on the issue of banknotes in England and Wales, although not in other parts of the United Kingdom. |
|
It's not possible to get your savings and keep the piggy bank intact. You can't have your cake and eat it too! |
|
Exerting all his remaining strength he rushed down the bank, dropped his rifle, and plunged headforemost into the stream. |
|
The Bank of England is the UK's central bank and is responsible for issuing notes and coins in the nation's currency, the pound sterling. |
|
The World Pilot Gig Championships are held annually over the May Day bank holiday weekend. |
|
As with other waves, the wave tends to break in shallow places and near the bank, and flow smoothly in deep water. |
|
One day, all of your bank and credit card transactions may be processed by Beowulf clusters. |
|
Both structures are on the south bank, at a natural crossing point where the River Effra flows into the River Thames. |
|
The ECB is the central bank for the eurozone, and thus controls monetary policy in that area with an agenda to maintain price stability. |
|
He bobbed up and flailed toward the near bank. The weight of his boots and soaked uniform kept pulling him under. |
|
Even worse than the sand, though, was the grassy bank that comes down between the bunkers, where the rough was so thick it amounted to bogeyland. |
|
I grabbed them and splashed across the river and up the far bank, backed deep into a boobialla bush and pulled them in after me. |
|
The corresponding rise in bank savings is, of course, beneficial to the government in its search for borrowable funds. |
|
He got a custard danish that had sat around too long and a cup of builder's, ate the cake while he waited on hold for the bank. |
|
The bank was purposely reduced in height and the ditch continued to silt up. |
|
The Avebury monument is a henge, a type of monument consisting of a large circular bank with an internal ditch. |
|
In 1894 Sir Henry Meux put a trench through the bank, which gave the first indication that the earthwork was built in two phases. |
|
The existence of two possible wharves on the east bank of the River Foss support this idea. |
|
So, I watched from behind an icicle plant bank getting angrier and angrier by the minute. |
|
|
Meanwhile, William attacked the Danes, who had moored for the winter south of the Humber in Lincolnshire, and drove them back to the north bank. |
|
When the war with France broke out, the French king confiscated the Riccardi's assets, and the bank went bankrupt. |
|
I switched to a different bank for better customer service, but there was little difference in terms of interest rates. |
|
In 1599, a partnership of members of the company built their own theatre on the south bank of the River Thames, which they named the Globe. |
|
The piped water had already failed which they were designed to use, but parts of the river bank could still be reached. |
|
You'll see my house just before the bank and after the school. |
|
Napoleon invaded Prussia with 180,000 troops, rapidly marching on the right bank of the River Saale. |
|
The network comprises Masterlink, a bureau de change, and a United Kingdom bank, along with a partnering MTO and a bank in Uganda. |
|
The United States had partly funded the purchase by means of a loan from Baring Brothers, a British bank. |
|
Farther up the bank was a stand of pecans where a cat squirrel was taking bites of green nuts and dropping them to the ground to rot. |
|
On the other bank, opposite our camp, a chaikhana is set on a pile of shingle. |
|
The assembly was established in 2000 and meets at City Hall on the south bank of the River Thames, close to Tower Bridge. |
|
There is a public riverside walk along the river bank, opened in stages over recent years. |
|
He went to the grocery store around the corner from the bank. |
|
Joe and Hoss tied their horses to the hitching post before going into the bank. |
|
On the northern bank were the ancient counties of Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Middlesex and Essex. |
|
On the southern bank were the counties of Wiltshire, Berkshire, Surrey and Kent. |
|
Consider the first, allegedly contrastive fact, that there were some bank robbings by Sutton rather than no robbings at all by Sutton. |
|
Docks were developed along with a shipbuilding industry, flour milling and soap manufacture on the river's Cheshire bank. |
|
Without the bank of mum and dad, finding the deposit is hard. Part of me thinks that this is nothing new. |
|
|
To the east of Gateshead and Newcastle, the Tyne divides Hebburn and Jarrow on the south bank from Walker and Wallsend on the north bank. |
|
It flows into the Severn near the town of Chepstow, slightly upstream of the Bristol Avon on the opposite bank. |
|
There are a number of viewpoints from which the bore can be seen, or viewers can walk along the river bank or floodbanks. |
|
Hazards in high water conditions can include floating trees, collapsing portions of river bank, overhanging branches and even dead farm animals. |
|
George Bancroft stars as ruthless stock manipulator Jim Bradford, who plays his customers for suckers and laughs all the way to the bank. |
|
Who cares if he's not funny? The venture capitalists behind Twitter will be laughing all the way to the bank. |
|
Other sources of income, e.g. part-time job, bank of mum and dad, tax credits, etc. |
|
Defences, consisted initially of a ditch and bank in the early 12th century. |
|
The precise location can be discerned by a gentle bank roughly oval in shape. |
|
The butter, rich and yellow as the gowaned bank on which the milky mother has depastured, is probably taken directly from the churn. |
|
Established in 1694, it is the second oldest central bank in operation today, after the Sveriges Riksbank. |
|
Until 2016, the bank provided personal banking services as a popular privilege for employees. |
|
In 1946, shortly after the end of Norman's tenure, the bank was nationalised by the Labour government. |
|
The Bank also acts as the bankers' bank, especially in its capacity as a lender of last resort. |
|
A central bank, reserve bank, or monetary authority is an institution that manages a state's currency, money supply, and interest rates. |
|
The bank was soon accused by the bullionists of causing the exchange rate to fall from over issuing banknotes, a charge which the Bank denied. |
|
Henry Thornton, a merchant banker and monetary theorist has been described as the father of the modern central bank. |
|
Evolving further partly in response to the European Central Bank, the People's Bank of China had by 2000 become a modern central bank. |
|
The chief executive of a central bank is usually known as the Governor, President or Chair. |
|
A central bank may use another country's currency either directly in a currency union, or indirectly on a currency board. |
|
|
A typical central bank has several interest rates or monetary policy tools it can set to influence markets. |
|
Through open market operations, a central bank influences the money supply in an economy. |
|
The central bank exchanges money for the security, increasing the money supply while lowering the supply of the specific security. |
|
Conversely, selling of securities by the central bank reduces the money supply. |
|
Diamond and Dybvig show that a bank offering an ordinary deposit contract can provide allocations superior to those of simple exchange markets. |
|
Banks would hold only a small percentage of their assets in the form of cash reserves as insurance against bank runs. |
|
Historically, bank reserves have formed only a small fraction of deposits, a system called fractional reserve banking. |
|
The central bank may subsequently reduce the money supply by various means, including selling bonds or foreign exchange interventions. |
|
For example, a central bank may regulate margin lending, whereby individuals or companies may borrow against pledged securities. |
|
However, since the introduction of the new law, the Bank of Japan has rebuffed government requests to stimulate the economy. |
|
With a quiet bank holiday afternoon to fill, the Mill yesterday dug out the old magic kit, brushed the cobwebs off its top hat and practiced a few abracadabras. |
|
A bank employee was accused of aiding and abetting the gang of robbers. |
|
If the idea of a kid who shares genes with you running around somewhere doesn't freak you out, then by all means, sell your baby batter to a sperm bank. |
|
In some localities the bank margins of several cycles are stacked above each other, in other places they backstep or prograde relative to each other. |
|
At the left a man stands on the bank of a marsh seemingly holding up a long spear on which is impaled a fish and a duck represented just above the fish. Both fish are bultis. |
|
This bank is properly a general cash, where every man lodges his money. |
|
The daily cheque clearings began around 1770 when bank clerks met at the Five Bells to exchange all their cheques in one place and settle the balances in cash. |
|
They do not, however, all deal with the same banker, and when A gives a cheque to B, B usually pays it not into the same but into some other bank. |
|
The bank teller counted out five twenty-dollar bills and gave them to me. |
|
He cratered into that snow bank about five seconds after his first lesson. |
|
|
To reach the other bank of the river, we tried crossing over on a log. |
|
When his rich aunt died, he was crying all the way to the bank. |
|
A large wave like an eagre, diverging from its bow, was extending to either bank, swamping the tules and threatening to submerge the lower levees. |
|
The river bank had been eaten away over the years by the flood water. |
|
The bank required that cheque endorsement be witnessed by a cashier. |
|
Some four months after this event, a smart Yesaul, at the head of a party of Kozaks, on the high road to Nishnei Novogorod perceives a poor fellow resting himself upon a bank. |
|
Fresh water was added through the last bank of flooder sprays. |
|
The bank called the foreclosee to say they were taking his house. |
|
Once that bank gets its claws into you, it doesn't let go easily. |
|
When the bank refused the credit, all our plans went up in smoke. |
|
From Caesar's perspective, Germania was a geographical area of land on the east bank of the Rhine opposite Gaul, which Caesar left outside direct Roman control. |
|
Northern Rock, which became a bank in 1997 and was taken over by Virgin Money in November 2011, and the Newcastle Building Society are based in Gosforth. |
|
A wham-bam caper flick, efficiently directed by Roger Donaldson, that fancifully revisits the mysterious whos and speculative hows of a 1971 London bank heist. |
|
Deposits containing human bone date from as early as 3000 BC, when the ditch and bank were first dug, and continued for at least another five hundred years. |
|
As often happens in archaeological terminology, this is a holdover from antiquarian use, and Stonehenge is not truly a henge site as its bank is inside its ditch. |
|
A small outer bank beyond the ditch could also date to this period. |
|
They followed up by a campaign which swept the allies to the east bank of the Rhine and left the French, by the beginning of 1795, conquering the Dutch Republic itself. |
|
Charles kept the bulk of his troops several miles away from the river bank in hopes of concentrating them at the point where Napoleon decided to cross. |
|
Commonly known as the Houses of Parliament after its occupants, the Palace lies on the north bank of the River Thames in the City of Westminster, in central London. |
|
David's Day bank holidays in England and Wales, respectively. |
|
|
The bandits knocked over another bank, making three this week. |
|
Also on Castle Street is the Grade I listed Bank of England Building, constructed between 1845 and 1848, as one of only three provincial branches of the national bank. |
|
At this point, it historically formed the southern boundary of the medieval city, with Southwark, on the opposite bank, then being part of Surrey. |
|
Oliver Twist finishes in the slums and rookeries along its south bank. |
|
Liverpool Sailing Club located at Garston Coastal Park on the north bank of the estuary has a 1000 feet slipway giving access to river for water sports. |
|
Ivan Boesky laughed all the way to the bank, as did Milken, as do most people who commit clever, non-violent crimes and fraudulently enrich themselves. |
|
The University of Cambridge rowing club has a boathouse on the bank of the river, and trains there for the annual Boat Race against the University of Oxford. |
|
The Bank of England is the UK's central bank and its Monetary Policy Committee is responsible for setting interest rates, quantitative easing, and forward guidance. |
|
The Bank of England is the central bank, responsible for issuing currency. |
|
All banks are required to hold a certain percentage of their assets as capital, a rate which may be established by the central bank or the banking supervisor. |
|
While a large volume of economic research has been done to define the relationship between central bank independence and economic performance, the results are ambiguous. |
|
It is argued that an independent central bank can run a more credible monetary policy, making market expectations more responsive to signals from the central bank. |
|
Due to the slow pace of informal negotiations, BAE Systems exercised its put option which saw investment bank Rothschild appointed to give an independent valuation. |
|
With support from the Department of Health of the Spanish Republican Army, Duran established a blood bank for the use of wounded soldiers and civilians. |
|
In 1937 Bernard Fantus, director of therapeutics at the Cook County Hospital in Chicago, established the first hospital blood bank in the United States. |
|
Unmodified, traditional trams provide a 'heritage service' on weekends, bank holidays and summer months, as well as operate on tours during the illuminations. |
|
Upon maturity of the debt, the investment bank returns the loaned shares. |
|
Students do not qualify for this loan program if they are in a continuing education program through an academic credit bank system or a school outside of Korea. |
|
It is located behind the Tate Modern art gallery on the south bank of the river, and was previously the headquarters of the Central Electricity Generating Board. |
|
Henry Austen's bank failed in March 1816, depriving him of all of his assets, leaving him deeply in debt and losing Edward, James, and Frank Austen large sums. |
|
|
Apparently the journo was referring to the bank of effects pedals he had strewn across the stage that he had to keep staring at in order to operate. |
|
The UK Treasury issued a report on 20 May 2013 which said that Scotland's banking systems would be too big to ensure depositor compensation in the event of a bank failure. |
|
Taking off from the right bank of the Jamna river early in its course, the canal irrigated the Sultan's territories in the Hissar region of Eastern Punjab. |
|
With the Netherlands falling, Prussia also decided to leave the coalition, signing the Peace of Basel on 6 April, ceding the west bank of the Rhine to France. |
|
The Bank of England's MPC Agency for the East Midlands is sited on the ng2 estate, near Experian and its economic data. |
|
In an industry built on big talk and swagger, Bank of America's Kenneth Lewis is an anomaly. |
|
Fragments of Haddington, of Comely Bank, of Craigenputtoch interweaved with cockneycalities into a very habitable whole. |
|
The Bank of England's anti-inflation efforts will come to nothing if the US Federal Reserve refuse to join in the plan. |
|
The Bank of England's anti-inflation efforts will come to nought if the U.S. Federal Reserve refuse to join in the plan. |
|
The country was ranked 169th overall and last in the East Asia and Pacific region by the Doing Business 2013 report by the World Bank. |
|
Main employers in the city now include Aviva, Royal Bank of Scotland and Scottish and Southern Energy. |
|
The enquiry will prepare a detailed scheme for transferring the Bank of England to public control and then revise the operation of the Bank Acts. |
|
Haig's education began in 1869 as a boarder at Mr Bateson's School in Clifton Bank, St Andrews. |
|
In October 1878, this was compounded by the failure of the Bank of Glasgow in which much of the village's money was invested. |
|
The view down Bank Street is closed by the baroque headquarters of the Bank of Scotland. |
|
The remainder of the Lloyds TSB business would be rebranded as Lloyds Bank. |
|
Although officially HBOS is not an acronym of any specific words, it is widely presumed to stand for Halifax Bank of Scotland. |
|
The corporate headquarters of the group were located on The Mound in Edinburgh, Scotland, the former head office of the Bank of Scotland. |
|
In March 2008, HBOS shares fell 17 percent amid false rumours that it had asked the Bank of England for emergency funding. |
|
All three are part of the Halifax Bank of Scotland Group, Britain's biggest mortgage lender. |
|
|
In 2002, HBOS dropped the Bank of Wales brand and absorbed the operations into Bank of Scotland Business Banking. |
|
As these pulses moves along the coast on the Agulhas Bank, they tend to pinch off Agulhas rings from the Agulhas Current. |
|
The Bank of Scotland was effective in raising funds for the Jacobite Rebellion. |
|
The policy of the Royal Bank was to either drive the Bank of Scotland out of business, or take it over on favourable terms. |
|
To pay these notes, the Bank of Scotland was forced to call in its loans and, in March 1728, to suspend payments. |
|
Despite talk of a merger with the Bank of Scotland, the Royal Bank did not possess the wherewithal to complete the deal. |
|
By September 1728, the Bank of Scotland was able to start redeeming its notes again, with interest, and in March 1729, it resumed lending. |
|
The Royal Bank of Scotland stated that, as of the announcement, the search for Hester's successor would commence. |
|
In 2006, The Royal Bank of Scotland Group undertook the first trial of PayPass contactless debit and credit cards in Europe. |
|
In response, the Bank of Scotland itself began to open branches throughout Scotland. |
|
In 1971, the Bank agreed to merge with the British Linen Bank, owned by Barclays Bank. |
|
The arrival of North Sea Oil to Scotland in the 1970s allowed the Bank of Scotland to expand into the energy sector. |
|
The Bank later used this expertise in energy finance to expand internationally. |
|
In 1999, the Bank of Scotland made a takeover bid for National Westminster Bank. |
|
However, The Royal Bank of Scotland tabled a rival offer, and a bitter takeover battle ensued, with the Royal Bank the victor. |
|
It will take at least three years for the current issue of Bank of Scotland notes to be phased out of circulation. |
|
Brock came of a merchant family, was an accountant and one of the founders of the Glasgow Savings Bank. |
|
A few months later came the acquisition of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Bank, which had been weakened by the same economic disturbances. |
|
Before opening for business it acquired the Dundee Commercial Bank to serve as its Dundee office. |
|
The following month, CYBG announced the closure of a further 9 Clydesdale branches and 17 Yorkshire Bank branches. |
|
|
People were so grateful that some called the first Bank Holidays St Lubbock's Days for a while. |
|
Bank holidays do not, however, assume the same importance in Scotland as they do elsewhere. |
|
The Commonwealth Bank, as its name indicates, was also founded as public company before later being privatized. |
|
The Labour government nationalised major public utilities such as mines, gas, coal, electricity, rail, iron, steel and the Bank of England. |
|
Doggerland was named after the Dogger Bank, which in turn was named after the 17th century Dutch fishing boats called doggers. |
|
Amadeo Giannini's Bank of Italy, later to become Bank of America, provided loans for many of those whose livelihoods had been devastated. |
|
However, in 1932 and 1934 Hayek had criticised the FED and the Bank of England for not taking a more contractionary stance. |
|
The Bank of Greece tried to adopt deflationary policies to stave off the crises that were going on in other countries, but these largely failed. |
|
Takahashi used the Bank of Japan to sterilize the deficit spending and minimize resulting inflationary pressures. |
|
In response, President Hoover and Congress approved the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, to spur new home construction, and reduce foreclosures. |
|
From December 2017, there will also be an hourly train to Leeds stopping at Warrington Bank Quay, Manchester and Bradford Interchange. |
|
Basics Bank, based at the Barnabas Centre, provides debt relief for local people. |
|
With regards to agriculture, the World Bank targets food production and water management as an increasingly global issue that will foster debate. |
|
Llandudno services run every hour to Manchester Piccadilly via Chester and Warrington Bank Quay. |
|
Stellwagen Bank Sanctuary has also been designated for watching this species. |
|
The recreational facilities at Biggar Bank were scaled back, but the island's beaches remain locally popular. |
|
In January 2010, a licence to develop a wind farm on Dogger Bank was granted to Forewind Ltd, a consortium of developers. |
|
Due to the relatively great depth of the Cleaver Bank, the soil is only seldom, in very heavy weather, moved by wave action. |
|
Rare species living on Cleaver Bank are Thracia convexa and the Rayed artemis. |
|
In 2001, the Dutch government considered the Cleaver Bank as a potential area for mining gravel. |
|
|
Noordhinder Bank is a shoal in the southern part of the North Sea, between Antwerp and the mouth of the Thames. |
|
During World War I, there was a naval skirmish referred to as the Battle off Noordhinder Bank between the German and British naval forces nearby. |
|
The Dogger Bank earthquake of 1931 was the strongest earthquake recorded in the United Kingdom since measurements began. |
|
The most important spawning grounds are in the waters off middle Norway, near southwest Iceland, and Georges Bank. |
|
Set in both Russia and Japan, it ends with the Dogger Bank incident involving the Baltic Fleet. |
|
The question of shell effectiveness had also been raised after the Battle of Dogger Bank, but no action had been taken. |
|
The World Bank estimates that over 150 cubic kilometers of natural gas are flared or vented annually. |
|
In January 2010, Forewind was announced as the developer for the Dogger Bank Zone, the largest of the Round 3 zones. |
|
Dogger Bank Teesside is intended to be the second stage of development of the Dogger Bank Zone. |
|
The power hub would interconnect the three national power grids with each other and with the Dogger Bank Wind Farm. |
|
There is an annual cricket match on Bramble Bank during the lowest tide of the year, but games are often cut short by rising tide. |
|
Around 59th and Lexington, where Dry Dock Savings Bank is located, pickings are lush for the purple-pantsuited culture vulture. |
|
The waters of the Agulhas Bank off the coast are quite shallow and are renowned as one of the best fishing grounds in South Africa. |
|
South of the AFFZ traces can be found of how the Falkland Plateau and the Agulhas Bank moved relative to each other. |
|
Of more than 200 offshore wells in South Africa, most are found on Bredasdorp Basin on the Agulhas Bank. |
|
Fisheries are one of the major threats to the biodiversity of the Agulhas Bank. |
|
In 2005, when Korean and Philippine vessels started longline fishing along the edges of the Agulhas Bank, seabird bycatch became a huge problem. |
|
Georges Bank was part of the North American mainland as recently as 12,000 years ago. |
|
For over 400 years, Georges Bank supported lucrative fisheries for Atlantic cod and halibut. |
|
Canada's portion of the Gulf of Maine now includes the easternmost portion of Georges Bank. |
|
|
Further southeast are the equally wholly submerged Silver Bank and Navidad Bank north of the Dominican Republic. |
|
The slopes around them however, such as the border of the Tongue of the Ocean in the Great Bahama Bank, are very steep. |
|
Data on the fertilizer consumption per hectare arable land in 2012 are published by The World Bank. |
|
Cornwall Council, in partnership with the Eden Project, is bidding to have the world's first Green Investment Bank based in Cornwall. |
|
At the end of the book, David meets him in a prison, for attempting to defraud the Bank of England. |
|
The event is organized by Rob da Bank and is an offshoot of his Sunday Best record label and club nights. |
|
America Wood is a Site of Special Scientific Interest located between Shanklin and Whiteley Bank. |
|
The government entered into agreements with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to promote growth. |
|
Banks are administered by the National Bank of Moldova, so this loss was covered from state reserves. |
|
Schlesinger made Jackson a hero for his successful attacks on the Second Bank of the United States. |
|
The Central Bank of Somalia, the nation's monetary authority, also shut down operations. |
|
The political crisis of 1991 led to the suspension of IMF and World Bank assistance. |
|
The Bank was governed by four consuls who administered its finances and directed investments. |
|
By 1445, the Bank suspended operations focusing on servicing the Genoese state. |
|
Many of Genoa's overseas territories were governed either directly or indirectly by the Bank. |
|
The Taman peninsula remained in the control of the de Ghisolfi family, but the princes of that clan now reported to the Bank. |
|
There are a few internationally linked automated teller machines that accept Visa cards in Freetown operated by ProCredit Bank. |
|
In the 1960s some 2 billion pounds of cod were harvested annually from the Grand Bank off Newfoundland, the world's largest source of fish. |
|
Indeed, the structure of the Medici Bank resembles nothing so much as the modern holding company. |
|
The World Bank has helped the Paraguayan government reduce the country's maternal and infant mortality. |
|
|
In golf, the former Mauritius Open and the current AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open have been part of the European Tour. |
|
According to the World Bank Group, the PRD has become the largest urban area in the world in both size and population. |
|
Bahrain has a high Human Development Index and was recognised by the World Bank as a high income economy. |
|
Colombia is now one of only three economies with a perfect score on the strength of legal rights index, according to the World Bank. |
|
Manila serves as the headquarters of the Central Bank of the Philippines which is located along Roxas Boulevard. |
|
According to the Government Development Bank, this might be the only solution to the debt crisis. |
|
Ardito Barletta inherited a country in economic ruin and hugely indebted to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. |
|
The economy of Peru is classified as upper middle income by the World Bank and is the 39th largest in the world. |
|
In October 2015 Lima hosted the 2015 Annual Meetings of the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund. |
|
The city has a web of tram and bus lines operated by De Lijn and providing access to the city centre, suburbs and the Left Bank. |
|
The Asian Development Bank is responsible for exploring the feasibility and construction of the basket. |
|
According to the World Bank, Barbados is classified as being in its 66 top high income economies of the world. |
|
Morris used a French loan in 1782 to set up the private Bank of North America to finance the war. |
|
The surrounding elevated seabed is called the Rockall Bank, lying directly south from an area known as the Rockall Plateau. |
|
By March 1907, the Savings Bank Insurance League had 70,000 members and Brandeis's face and name now appeared regularly in newspapers. |
|
According to the World Bank, Nicaragua ranked as the 123rd best economy for starting a business. |
|
The World Bank, African Development Bank, European Investment Bank, and many other bilateral donors financed the project. |
|
Sterling was draining out of the Bank of England at an alarming rate, and it was getting worse. |
|
The World Bank reports that China was the top importer of ores and metals in 2005 followed by the US and Japan. |
|
Ketley Bank is located to the SE of Ketley, between Oakengates and the M54 motorway. |
|