Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
With German prices rising at less than 1% annually, the eurozone periphery needs falling prices in order to regain the competitiveness lost during the pre-2008 boom years.
We estimate that the world could capture three gigatons of CO2
annually
– equivalent to taking more than 600 million cars off the roads – simply by planting more trees.
This should not be surprising – educational results take years to measure, but profits and bonuses for executives are calculated
annually.
Its economy grew 4% annually, much faster than America’s annual 3% growth.
In 2015, I asserted that the developed world should be able to accept at least a million refugees annually; later I reduced that global figure to 500,000, of which I suggested Europe could take 300,000.
With fewer than 13,000 prescriptions
annually
for pyrimethamine, drug manufacturers did not have the financial incentive to navigate the US Food and Drug Administration’s application process for regulatory approval.
In 2000, the World Bank estimated that OECD agricultural protectionism cost the developing world $20 billion in welfare losses
annually.
These are impressive figures, and the expense is trivial compared to the anti-retroviral drugs needed to treat AIDS, which cost more than $200
annually
and must be taken every day, not every year.
Funding a proxy war in Yemen, propping up a political party and terrorist group in Lebanon, and seeking to dominate Syria and Iraq cost billions of dollars
annually.
It is estimated that consumers making better-informed buying decisions across sectors could capture an estimated $1.1 trillion in value
annually.
By sharing the treatment data of a large patient population, for example, care providers can better identify practices that could save $180 billion
annually.
The oil and gas industry, for example, could save $450 billion
annually
by sharing anonymized and aggregated data on the management of upstream and downstream facilities.
We have set the goal of growing at an average of 6% annually, in order to attain, by 2018, the per capita GDP now enjoyed by European countries such as Portugal and the Czech Republic.
Such an integrated energy market would lead to significant savings – estimates go as high as €40 billion ($51 billion)
annually
by 2030 – thereby providing a much-needed competitiveness boost.
In 2011, the Chinese government earmarked $1.5 billion
annually
for the industry for the next 10 years, hoping to transform the country into one of the leading producers of zero-emission vehicles.
Indeed, even a mammogram (almost 40 million are given
annually
in the US) that detects a cancer does not necessarily save a life.
The Dartmouth researchers found that, of the estimated 138,000 breast cancers detected
annually
in the US, the test did not help 120,000-134,000 of the afflicted women.
In their 2013 coalition agreement, the Christian Democratic Union and the Social Democrats set a goal of raising public and private investment by 3% of GDP, or €90 billion ($100.8 billion) annually, to reach the OECD average.
To succeed, more than €30 billion, or 1% of GDP, will have to be invested
annually
in network infrastructure, renewable-energy generation, combined heat and power systems, and storage technologies in the coming decades.
This would mean that the EBRD could invest up to €10 billion
annually
over the next five years, enabling us to continue to fulfill our role, providing vital backing and financial support to Eastern Europe and the private sector.
Globally, an estimated 2-3 million child deaths and 600,000 adult deaths are prevented
annually
through immunization.
Official statistics suggest that overall labor-force participation declined between 2011 and 2015, with fewer than two million new jobs created
annually.
And the egregious loopholes in the global corporate-tax system should be closed, thereby boosting global corporate taxation by some $200 billion annually, if not more.
A carbon tax on international shipping and aviation set at the same level (or auction revenues from emissions caps, if that pricing route is followed) could generate $10 billion
annually
for international climate action from just 25-50% of the revenues, even after ensuring that costs borne by developing countries are covered.
All these measures together could raise about $50 billion
annually
in net public funding to help developing countries adapt to climate change.
One option that we have identified is to account for public investments as they depreciate, rather than at the time of capital formation, thereby unlocking up to €140 billion ($157 billion)
annually.
In the absence of detailed and reliable reporting from all countries, the British government commissioned a series of reports on AMR, estimating that by 2050, as many as ten million people could die
annually
from AMR complications.
That failure could end up costing Germany alone upwards of €21 billion
annually
for years to come.
In recent years, the UN Refugee Agency has been able to resettle fewer than 75,000 of more than 20 million refugees
annually.
In 2016, developed countries should agree to accept a combined total approaching a million refugees annually, either through resettlement or by issuing humanitarian, student, labor, and other visas.
Back
Next
Related words
Billion
Million
Would
Years
Which
Could
About
Growth
Countries
Global
Trillion
Average
Estimated
Economy
People
World
Their
Investment
Roughly
Dollars