Estimated
in sentence
1236 examples of Estimated in a sentence
Natural climate solutions have the potential to reduce CO2 emissions by an
estimated
11.3 billion tons a year – equal to a complete halt in burning oil, according to our study.
The Financial Stability Board has
estimated
that total global shadow-banking assets in 2011 amounted to $67 trillion, with the US accounting for $23 trillion, the eurozone for $22 trillion, and the United Kingdom for $9 trillion.
Every year, an
estimated
two million people worldwide die prematurely, owing to the effects of breathing polluted air.
And, according to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, America’s financial health will suffer as well, with an
estimated
$1.214 trillion added to the deficit by 2027.
It has been
estimated
that annual economic growth in countries with a high incidence of malaria is 1.3 percentage points lower than that of other countries.
According to the US-based Center for Responsive Politics, spending on the election – for President and Congress, and including spending by outside groups as well as by the candidates and their political parties – is
estimated
to have exceeded $6 billion.
In 2000, the World Bank
estimated
that OECD agricultural protectionism cost the developing world $20 billion in welfare losses annually.
It is
estimated
that several million AR-15 semiautomatic rifles (the type used in the Orlando killings and by US soldiers in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq) are in circulation in the US.
Some analysts have
estimated
that, with many fewer employees needed to produce the current volume of goods and services, a large share of current employment could be made redundant.
The pandemics of SARS, avian, and swine influenza have cost the global economy an
estimated
$200 billion.
Sustainable transport would also improve our mental health, with an
estimated
6% less depression.
Sadly, Ukraine is not the only example: The human toll in China of Mao Zedong’s Great Leap Forward of 1958-1961 was even greater, causing an
estimated
15-45 million deaths.
It is
estimated
that consumers making better-informed buying decisions across sectors could capture an
estimated
$1.1 trillion in value annually.
A mortality survey conducted by the International Rescue Committee (IRC) and released earlier this year demonstrates that this conflict is the world’s most deadly crisis since World War II: an
estimated
5.4 million people have died as a consequence of the war and its lingering effects in the last decade.
As it stands, an
estimated
700,000 people are losing their lives to drug-resistant infections each year.
About 10 million mortgages are
estimated
to be “underwater” (the house is worth less than the loan).
The humanitarian situation is already dire for 60% of Yemen’s 30 million inhabitants: an
estimated
seven million people could be close to famine; and almost 500,000 children are at risk of severe malnutrition.
Never mind that the Chinese renminbi has risen some 33% against the US dollar since mid-1995 to a level that the International Monetary Fund no longer considers undervalued, or that China’s current-account surplus has shrunk from 10% of GDP in 2007 to an
estimated
2% in 2014.
An
estimated
44 million people are unemployed in developed countries, about 12 million more than in 2007, while inflation has reached its lowest level since the crisis.
Unraveling how the bears accomplish this miraculous feat may offer hope to the
estimated
1.5 million people worldwide receiving treatment for kidney failure.
The
estimated
330 million working women who lived below the poverty line in 2008-2009 accounted for roughly 60% of the 550 million working poor worldwide.
Almost three billion people still burn dung, twigs, and other traditional fuels indoors to cook and keep warm, generating noxious fumes that kill an
estimated
two million people each year, mostly women and children.
What a difference a decade makes: In 2012, Chinese consumers purchased an
estimated
18 million new cars, a 300% increase.
Ultimately, China wants a total of five million EVs on the country’s roads, powered by an
estimated
10,000 charging stations, by 2020.
It is
estimated
that meeting the World Health Organization’s interim standards could reduce damages by $80 per capita.
But the
estimated
1.8 million Roma in the country – who struggle with pervasive unemployment, poor living conditions, low life expectancy, and low rates of school attendance – have benefited very little from these funds.
An
estimated
100 million people could fall below the poverty line this year.
Globally, an
estimated
2-3 million child deaths and 600,000 adult deaths are prevented annually through immunization.
Yet, worldwide, an
estimated
18.7 million infants are not being reached by routine immunization services.
In 2014, an
estimated
42% of all global deaths from measles were in Africa.
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