unviable
આર્થિક રીતે પોષાય
definition
adjective
the commission found the plan to be financially unviable
not capable of working successfully; not feasible.
example
Although Rover workers at Longbridge initially celebrated the withdrawal of Alchemy, the reality is that their hopes are now pinned on a deal that was once dismissed as 'unviable' .
It is due to this severe downturn in business that the business has become 'unviable' in its present form to the point where the owners have sought to sell the whole property inclusive of outbuildings.
The Government struggled to find sites for this latest round of tests; if many more landowners drop out then the trials will be scientifically 'unviable' and must be called off.
It's virtually nothing but a support scheme for 'unviable' French farmers whose ventures exist for historical and cultural, not economic, reasons.
We do not want to have something that becomes financially 'unviable' .
The Minerals and Petroleum Resources Department claims an aluminium smelter in WA would be 'unviable' due to high energy costs.
It is an 'unviable' situation, where, the local county council are stripped of any voice to represent their electorate in regard to such major developments.
He said: ‘This is potentially another nail in the coffin of the commoners' lifestyle, which makes it 'unviable' .’
In whose interests would it be to have an incomplete or 'unviable' development in Scarborough North Bay?
A proposal to introduce a mobile library servicing areas of rural Waterford that don't have a public library has been rejected as economically 'unviable' .
He said: ‘It wasn't a popular route 95 per cent of the time and had become financially 'unviable' for us.’
Icmsa will not tolerate State bodies implementing laws, which could either deprive farmers of their premia rights or make farming 'unviable' .
The reason given was that the Rarotonga Airport runway was not long enough for the aircraft to take off with a full load, making the service economically 'unviable' .
The situation has left small quarries economically 'unviable' , which is threatening attempts to boost supplies of local stone for historic building repairs, he said.
According to the report, findings of the consultant's report Shannon would be 'unviable' as a single entity while Cork would suffer substantial losses.
The question persists as to whether the current form of global capitalism is ecologically and socially sustainable and hence is politically 'unviable' in the long run.
He said the tax, which the Treasurer claims will see two-thirds of clubs pay either no tax or less tax, would also hurt smaller clubs, making them 'unviable' .
Cambridge abandoned plans for a new research facility last week claiming the cost of protecting it from animal rights extremists made the project economically 'unviable' .
He remarked that the Ring Road bus service, which looked worryingly 'unviable' at first, was fast picking up, and would take a lot of pressure off the City's roads.
Arriva Trains Wales has denied that it is planning to end rail services at Carmarthen, but the association believes that poor quality connections could make the service 'unviable' .
The appellant states that the 'unviability' of these proposals demonstrates the lack of need for such facilities in this area, and that there is now no requirement for a community use on the land which has been vacant for several years.
Matthew's narration sets up a series of images to convey the relationship between the individual and the cartographic activity that delimits fields of social viability and 'unviability' .
Our bona fide demand for a special railway zone was rejected citing financial 'unviability' .
By 1995, the fleet's 'unviability' was unmistakable.
The inability of the political establishment in Colombo to find a way out of the present impasse was not just an acute crisis of bourgeois rule but reflected the 'unviability' of the nation state system itself.
Credits: Google Translate