Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
More cereals were produced
annually
in the last quarter of the twentieth century than in any preceding period, and more grain will be harvested this year than at any time in history.
For example, with the pipeline crossing 890 kilometers of its territory, Cameroon will net $540 million
annually
in fees and royalties for the next 25 to 30 years.
Already, there are 18,000 desalination facilities in more than 100 countries producing roughly 32 billion cubic meters (8.45 trillion gallons) of fresh water – about one-third of the volume passing over Niagara Falls
annually.
In India, 13 million children
annually
are not reached with the rotavirus initiative; in Pakistan, five million children
annually
are not vaccinated.
But as the court’s ruling sinks in, commercial breeders and animal rights groups face a crucial question: could the creation of a legal market for farmed horns curb a poaching pandemic that claims some 1,500 wild rhinos
annually?
With around one billion people living in high-income countries, it would thus cost just $2 to $3 per person per year in the developed world to fund an effort that could save more than one million children
annually.
More productive infrastructure could reduce the world’s infrastructure bill by 40%, or $1 trillion
annually
– savings that could boost economic growth by about 3%, or more than $3 trillion, by 2030.
A more pragmatic approach to selecting infrastructure projects in which to invest – including a systematic evaluation of costs and benefits, based on precise criteria that account for broader economic and social objectives – could save the world $200 billion
annually.
Additional opportunities for savings – to the tune of $400 billion
annually
– lie in more streamlined delivery of infrastructure projects.
Governments could save $400 billion
annually
simply by increasing the efficiency and productivity of existing infrastructure.
For example, smart grids could cut power infrastructure costs by $2-6 billion
annually
in the US, while reducing costly outages.
In the US, former US congressmen and their staffers collect privileged information and sell it to hedge-fund managers, raking in $100 million
annually.
In non-fragile, low-income countries, aid for primary education now stands at just $23 per child
annually
– barely enough to buy two textbooks – down 8% from a decade ago.
Across the poorest countries, total spending on education averages just $80 per child per year – compared to more than $8,000 per child in the advanced economies – and can be as low as $24
annually
(in the DRC).
Such subsidies cost some $300 billion
annually
(by conservative estimates) and tend to benefit the wealthy, as they encourage excessive consumption.
If Badre’s plan is implemented, an additional $10 billion – or even as much as $20 billion – could be raised for international development
annually.
Such a policy was adopted in the aftermath of the 1973 war, when America offered $200 million
annually
for wheat procurement.
A simulation shows that if German wages grew at 4%
annually
instead of the 1.5% of the last decade, and if annual productivity growth in Spain accelerated to 2% (it was close to 0.7% in both countries), Spain could reverse the unit-labor-cost differential that emerged with Germany since 2000 in five years, with Spanish wages growing at about 1.7% per annum.
To put these numbers in context, consider that the US National Institutes of Health funds just over $30 billion
annually
in basic medical research, and members of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America spent about $51 billion last year on R&D.
Among the best-performing countries have been Ethiopia, where GDP grew by roughly 10%
annually
in the five years ending in 2011, and Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda, where annual output has grown by more than 6% for a decade or more.
Three billion additional people will need access to basic sanitation in the next 15 years, and providing for their needs will cost about $33 billion annually, according to an estimate by World Bank development economist Guy Hutton.
Eliminating open defecation in rural areas would cost only about $14 billion annually, and would deliver social benefits of $6 for every $1 spent.
Angola, Malawi, Mozambique, and Zambia owe an average of 150% of their GDP, and servicing the debt swallows billions of dollars
annually.
But it is difficult to see how the resulting growth could have been as high – reaching an unprecedented 10% or more
annually
in per-capita terms – without a global economy able to absorb these countries’ exports.
She offered to airlift 200,000-300,000 Syrian refugees
annually
directly to Europe on the condition that Turkey prevent them from going to Greece and will accept them back if they do so.
Such a move is likely to be effective, given the sheer size of Chinese interventions (hundreds of billions of US dollars annually), which could not easily be recycled through offshore banks without exposing the China’s central bank to many other risks.
Just two main routes, from Africa to Europe, and Latin America to the United States, generate an estimated $6.75 billion
annually
for the criminals who run these operations.
By matching Israel’s health-spending efficiency, the US could cut the cost of Medicare and Medicaid by $400 billion
annually
and eliminate nearly half of the federal deficit.
Could the US ignore a country that in roughly ten years will become the world’s second-largest oil exporter, generating more than $200 billion
annually
in revenue, while increasingly being dominated by an authoritarian Shia regime that is close to Iran?Would it withdraw in the face of the consequent strategic threat to its three allies – Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Israel – in the region?
From 2004 to 2013, China’s crude oil imports from Arab countries grew by more than 12% annually, on average, reaching 133 million tons per year.
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