Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
The US increased foreign aid by perhaps $4 billion a year at the same time that it increased military spending by $150 billion
annually
and cut taxes by trillions of dollars.
The resulting household air pollution contributes to 600,000 deaths
annually
– half of them children under the age of five.
The recent Africa Progress Panel report Power, People, Planet (of which I was lead author) puts total spending on energy products by people living on less than $2.50 a day at around $10 billion
annually.
Likewise, the British government has suggested that an open registry would save the UK and its businesses roughly £300 million ($460 million)
annually
by simplifying due diligence for financial institutions and reducing domestic financial crime.
With its population set to contract by 0.5%
annually
over the next 30 years, even if per capita income in Greece were to rise at the German rate of 1.5% per year, the debt would be difficult to service.
Last year, the Canadian gas supplier Pieridae Energy agreed to deliver five million tons of liquefied natural gas
annually
to the German utility E.ON for 20 years.
By next year, China’s outward investment is likely to reach over $100 billion
annually
– bringing it close to parity with inflows.
In fact, Australia has accepted roughly 7,000-10,000 refugees
annually
from UNHCR camps.
Current capacity is roughly 500 weapons
annually
in both Russia and the US, which means that the total of 2,000 weapons each that the ICNND Report suggests for the year 2025 cannot be fully implemented much before 2028.
For example, to maintain its current population size, Japan would have to accept 350,000 newcomers
annually
for the next 50 years, which is difficult for a culture that has historically been hostile to immigration.
Since 1990, the EU has heavily subsidized solar and wind energy at a cost of more than $20 billion
annually.
The relatively small reduction in emissions achieved through wind power costs more than $3.3 billion annually, and far smaller reductions from ethanol (biofuels) and solar panels cost at least $8.5 and $3 billion
annually.
The UK would pay at least $8 billion
annually
in subsidies to support this inherently inefficient technology.
Global infection rates are falling by about 2% annually, and even African countries hit by TB still managed a 4% decline in infections from 2013 to 2017.
This is worth several billion dollars annually, which could constitute one of the essential stepping-stones to sustained economic growth in Africa in a post-petroleum era.
In principle, no human in this day and age should die from rabies, and yet, according to a 2015 study, the virus kills 59,000 people
annually.
Since CITES entered into force, the number of trade permits issued
annually
has risen significantly, to more than one million.
A report in 2012 by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation estimated that the circular economy concept could save the European Union alone $380 billion
annually
in materials for medium-lifespan consumer durables such as cars, furniture, and household electric appliances.
To put this into context, 30,000 lives are lost
annually
on US highways.
Doubling the Interpol budget and allocating one-tenth of the International Monetary Fund’s yearly financial monitoring and capacity-building budget to tracing terrorist funds would cost about US$128 million
annually.
In late 2012, at the peak of the post-crisis austerity debate, advanced economies were in the midst of a multi-year tightening equivalent to more than one percentage point of GDP annually, according to cyclically-adjusted primary balance data from the International Monetary Fund.
According to the McKinsey Global Institute, the world still invests only $2.5 trillion
annually
in transportation, water, power, and telecommunication networks, well short of the estimated $3.3 trillion needed just to keep up with current trends.
Within the next five years, there could be more than one million cancer deaths
annually
in Africa, a surge in mortality that would make cancer one of the continent’s top killers.
This amounted to transferring
annually
8-10% of Germany’s national income, or 65-76% of its exports.
Had the economy expanded by 2%
annually
since 2008 – that is, at half its average growth rate from 1999 to 2007 – it would be over one-fifth larger than it is now.
In the United States alone, chronic pain is estimated to cost more than $600 billion
annually.
From 2003 to 2012, China’s annual GDP growth averaged 10.5%, while prices rose by only 3%
annually.
India's trains carry four times the number of passengers as China's, despite covering only half as many kilometers, but still lose about $7 billion
annually.
Given how high interest rates would have to be to attract investors, this will be no easy feat, especially because the railways currently have an operating surplus of just 6%, or about $100 million
annually
– barely 1% of the amount needed to upgrade and modernize the network.
US production of shale gas and oil has been growing by more than 50%
annually
over the last five years.
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