Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
With shadow banks’ lending rates running as high as 20% annually, interest rates in the private credit market are already liberalized, with many SMEs able to cope.
By 2020, GPE aims to distribute more than $2 billion
annually
to help improve education in developing countries around the world.
For example, burning a hectare of harvested willow on a field previously used for barley (the typical marginal crop in Denmark) prevents 30 tons of CO2
annually
when replacing coal.
Germany alone spends more than $3 billion annually, or $167 per ton of avoided CO2 emissions, which is more than 37 times the cost of carbon reductions in the European Union Emissions Trading System.
Failure to maintain strong surgical capacity could even undercut economic gains made by middle-income countries, reducing total GDP growth by approximately 2%
annually.
As a graphic on Bill Gates’ blog last year highlighted, mosquitos are responsible for 830,000 human deaths
annually
– 250,000 more than are caused by our fellow humans.
As a result, farmers are better able to get their goods to market before they perish, and to build more efficient irrigation systems, which save the global agricultural industry $8-22 billion
annually.
Export growth has slowed from its 2001-2008 average of 29%
annually
to below 10%, making foreign demand a far less critical engine of growth.
Sub-Saharan Africa – the region with the highest under-five mortality rate – doubled its average reduction rate, from 1.2%
annually
in 1990-2000 to 2.4% in 2000-2010.
This will render meaningless EU-wide debt-management agreements, including the Stability and Growth Pact, which limits the overall deficit to 3% of GDP, and the 2012 “fiscal compact,” which stipulates that countries whose debt-to-GDP ratios exceed the 60% limit should reduce them by one-twentieth
annually
until they are in compliance.
Contrary to stereotypes, for example, real wages in Greece have declined by 6%
annually
over the last three years.
Perhaps the case for moderate inflation (say, 4-6% annually) is not so compelling as it was at the outset of the crisis, when I first raised the issue.
The benefits to humanity – measured in terms of marginally less flooding, an almost negligible reduction in heat waves, and so forth – total roughly $1 billion
annually.
Toward the end of the century, slightly higher growth rates will have yielded a cumulative increase in income exceeding $100 trillion annually, with most going to the developing world.
By then, the benefits of freer trade would add about 20%
annually
to developing world GDP.
Even an extremely optimistic Doha climate outcome would have cost $500 billion annually, with benefits of less than five cents on the dollar.
It would be a mistake to presume that the vast expansion of trade between India and China, currently worth more than $60 billion
annually
(with China now India’s largest trading partner), must lead to improved bilateral relations.
Current investments in energy supply amount to more than $1.6 trillion annually, with $130 billion going to energy efficiency and $250 billion to renewables.
Of course, doing so would yield benefits: $3 trillion saved by avoiding the need for other infrastructure investment, benefits to industry and consumers of around $500 billion, and reductions in CO2 emissions worth somewhere between $25 billion and $250 billion
annually
by 2030.
On a macro level, the World Health Organization recently revised its estimate of the number of premature deaths due to air pollution to seven million
annually.
More than six million tons of fish are harvested
annually
from river basins with projected hydropower development.
Our research shows that these services add an estimated $770 billion
annually
to the global economy.
The atmosphere contains about 750 gigatons of CO2, while total annual human emission is approximately 5.5 Gt, thus adding
annually
roughly 0.7% of the total.
But the “Northern Powerhouse” initiative to revive cities in the UK’s north has obscured a reduction in regional aid, which over the last six years has fallen to just £2 billion ($2.5 billion)
annually.
Once a candidate has been chosen, it is important to set clear performance expectations that can be evaluated
annually.
The UN High Commission for Refugees now describes its objectives in its Global Strategic Priorities and evaluates progress toward them
annually.
Though UNRWA has more than 100 donors, almost a quarter of its total budget – nearly $400 million
annually
– previously came from the US.
In the only comprehensive overview based on surveys of businesses and households, the World Bank puts the total direct cost of corruption at $1 trillion
annually.
Hypertension affects a staggering one billion people worldwide, and is responsible for nearly ten million deaths
annually
– as many as all infectious diseases combined.
To regain the more than 200,000 hectares of irrigated land that is lost to cultivation annually, scientists have enhanced the salt tolerance of crops as diverse as tomatoes and canola.
Back
Next
Related words
Billion
Million
Would
Years
Which
Could
About
Growth
Countries
Global
Trillion
Average
Estimated
Economy
People
World
Their
Investment
Roughly
Dollars