Annually
in sentence
839 examples of Annually in a sentence
The region's economies have not experienced significant growth in the past five years (nor have they grown more than 5%
annually
in the past 20 years).
Counting Africa’s Invisible WorkersYAMOUSSOUKRO – The billions of dollars in aid delivered to Africa
annually
may do the continent much good, but it cannot deliver a solution to poverty.
Twelve of the world’s 15 most water-scarce countries – Algeria, Libya, Tunisia, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Oman, the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Israel, and Palestine – are in the region, and in eight, available fresh water amounts
annually
to less than 250 cubic meters per person.
As prices rose and production increased, this contribution increased substantially, averaging $73.5 billion
annually
from 2001 to 2004.
For many years, the government has maintained an implicit minimum growth target of 8% per year, which was considered necessary to create ten million new jobs
annually.
According to the Ministry of Environment of Japan, one hour’s adjustment in 2008 would have led to savings of an estimated 0.910 million kiloliters of crude oil
annually.
Despite few ready avenues for product commercialization, the world’s companies, research institutes, and university and government laboratories together spend more than a trillion dollars on R&D
annually.
Government spending is now increasing by 4%
annually
because of a new "action rule," enacted in 2001, that allows revenue from the Petroleum Fund to be phased into the domestic economy.
Global financial assets have grown by just 1.9%
annually
since the crisis, down from 7.9% average annual growth from 1990 to 2007.
Coal is also a massive export earner, bringing in roughly $2,000 per citizen
annually.
The rate will increase by 2.5%
annually
until 2015, when it will move to a floating rate.
Emissions permits are valued at roughly $9 billion
annually.
Copenhagen Consensus researchers calculate that for about $1 billion a year, vaccination programs could be expanded to prevent childhood pneumonia and diarrhea, saving an additional one million lives
annually.
As the world’s population ages, the incidence of NCDs is expected to rise, accounting for 52 million deaths
annually
by 2030.
The truth is that one extra child means perhaps 90 years of CO2 emissions (caused largely by a lifetime of consuming products and utilities that account for such emissions), which at worst would remain at around today’s level of about 15 tons per person
annually.
By the end of June, the Department of Commerce had already received 21,000 applications for exemptions, and it expects that number to double this year.Processing these applications takes time and introduces further complications, all the more so because companies seeking exemptions must apply separately for each type of steel (with the only difference sometimes being the component’s shape), and because exemptions must be renewed
annually.
During the first seven years of China’s official “reform and opening up,” which began in 1978, it is estimated that around 110 million people
annually
rose out of poverty.
The government’s target now is to lift ten million people out of poverty
annually.
Given the trillions of dollars of potential losses from human-induced climate change, and the trillions of dollars invested
annually
in global energy systems, the world’s governments would be wise to invest tens of billions of dollars each year in the research and development needed to achieve a low-carbon energy future.
The Jewish revolt against Greek rule in the second century BCE, which Jews now commemorate
annually
as Hanukkah, was caused in part by a decree banning circumcision under penalty of death.
I sat on the UN High-Level Advisory Group on Climate Change Finance, which concluded in 2010 that we could mobilize $100 billion
annually
by imposing an agreed levy per ton of CO2 emitted.
Furthermore, the demographic outlook is frightening: the working-age population, currently at the same level as in the late 1980s, is set to decline by 0.5-1%
annually
in the years to come.
A single reef shark that frequents major dive sites in Palau is worth roughly $179,000 annually, or $1.9 million over its lifetime; the same shark would be worth about $108 dead.
Similarly, the shark-diving industry has brought in an estimated $110 million
annually
to Thailand, $22 million to the Canary Islands, and a massive $800 million to the Bahamas over the last 20 years.
Add to that the more than 73 million individual sharks that are already lost annually, and the situation is clearly unsustainable.
That should surely provide more than enough time for Japanese beef ranchers to prepare themselves for foreign competition (of the 870,000 tons of beef imported annually, 520,000 tons come from Australia, the US, and New Zealand).
The report lays out the available options for mobilizing $100 billion
annually
for climate-change mitigation and adaptation in developing countries, and establishes the conditions that would make it possible to achieve this goal by 2020.
We know that dissemination of mosquito nets and malaria prevention programs could cut malaria incidence in half by 2015 for about $3 billion
annually
– less than 2% of the cost of Kyoto.
A $0.52 carbon tax per liter could raise over $50 billion
annually
for Saudi Arabia, substantially reducing this year’s projected budget deficit of $90 billion.
Trade data tell the story: after increasing by about 7%
annually
in the decade before 2008, world trade fell faster than global GDP in 2009 (and more sharply than during the Great Depression).
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