Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
As the director of the State Council’s Development Research Center, Li Wei, pointed out in February, at the current rate, China will be consuming 800 million tons of oil annually, and importing 75% of its petroleum, by 2030.
What struck me most during our visit was the substandard education they were receiving, with far too little support from Western aid (which amounts to only $2 per pupil
annually
in Nigeria and $12 per pupil across sub-Saharan Africa).
But with 20% interest rates, 9% of the country's GDP would be spent
annually
on financing its debt.
West Africa’s Misguided War on DrugsACCRA – A recent estimate by the United Kingdom’s Office for National Statistics that the market for illegal drugs adds £4.4 billion ($7.6 billion)
annually
to the country’s economy gives a sense of the astonishing scale of the illicit narcotics trade.
South Korea’s working-age population is falling by 1.2%
annually
– the fastest decline among OECD countries.
Moreover, while the incentives cost the US Treasury nearly $100 billion annually, they induce little new saving; instead, they cause high-income taxpayers to shift their savings to tax-advantaged assets – a major reason why President Barack Obama proposes capping the tax deduction for retirement saving.
The United Kingdom’s Institution of Mechanical Engineers estimated in 2013 that 1.2-2 billion tons of food (30-50% of total food production) is wasted
annually.
Launched in 2014 in Barcelona, the forum, which meets annually, operates on the principle that healthy and sustainable urban centers – a key component of any country’s dynamism and success – depend on the equal rights, duties, and opportunities of its residents.
Over the last decade, energy productivity has grown by only 0.7% annually, and the share of zero-carbon energy rose by only 0.1 percentage point per year.
According to the World Bank, Africa must spend a staggering $93 billion
annually
to upgrade its current infrastructure; the vast majority of these funds – some 87% – are needed for improvements to basic services like energy, water, sanitation, and transportation.
In exchange, two light-water nuclear reactors would be built to generate electric energy, and 500,000 metric tons of oil would be supplied
annually
until the first reactor began operating.
Worldwide energy demand has increased by more than 50% since 1980, and is expected to grow
annually
by 1.6% between now and 2030.
Studies indicate that 40% of all patients fall short of the diagnoses that doctors and psychiatrists give them, yet 200 million prescriptions are still written
annually
in the US to treat depression and anxiety.
Since 2000, an estimated 60% of the world’s conflict-related deaths have been in the MENA region, while violence in Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Yemen continues to displace millions of people
annually.
The downstream sector, together with fuels distribution, contributes a total of around €240 billion
annually
to treasury coffers.
The host government for the Brisbane summit spends some $3 billion
annually.
According to UNESCO, the international community will need to provide at least an additional $39 billion
annually
to educate the world’s children – and that is assuming that developing-country governments increase their own expenditure on education.
Typically, in the first stage of this process, consumers would use a renewable energy source such as LED lighting, selling any surplus until they save enough money to buy lamp oil (on which Africans spend around $20 billion annually).
The April 2010 report forecast a US growth rate of roughly 2.5%
annually
in 2012-2013; current projections put the rate a little higher than 2%.
Once refugees are made eligible for IDA grants, the World Bank could quickly raise funds – as much as $5 billion
annually
– by issuing bonds, using its recently awarded triple-A credit rating.
Comparisons between countries with different cultures are difficult, but the same effect appears within countries, except at very low income levels, such as below $12,000
annually
for the US.
Moreover, the current government budgets just $50
annually
for each child attending elementary school.
The revenues collected – easily hundreds of billions of dollars
annually
– could be spent on global public goods such as development assistance, vaccines for tropical diseases, and the greening of technologies in use in the developing world.
Unfortunately, the latest political incident involving the democracy-promoting activities of American NGOs has cooled bilateral relations and threatens the $1.3 billion in military assistance that Egypt receives
annually
from the United States.
The number of transactions is huge, estimated at 1.5 billion remittances
annually.
In all, an estimated 10% of the world’s population is estimated to benefit from remittances, with 57 countries each receiving $1 billion or more
annually.
Despite these efforts – not to mention the boost provided by rapid GDP growth in China, Japan’s economy expanded by just 0.75% annually, on average, for the entire decade.
In return for that privilege, Norway contributes
annually
to the EU budget, agrees to play by all the bloc’s rules – even if it has no part in their formulation – and allows for the free movement of EU citizens.
Today, South Korean’s economy has been growing
annually
by 5% on average for ten years, whereas Japan grew by 0.42% per year during the same period.
R. Christina Daurisca, an economist at the Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population, found that nearly 4,000 lives could be saved
annually
by creating a national ambulance network.
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