Mitigate
in sentence
558 examples of Mitigate in a sentence
And basically, our challenge is to optimize the benefits and
mitigate
the risks of living on a planet that's driven by only two processes, two sources of energy, one of which is solar, that drives the winds, the waves, the clouds, the storms and photosynthesis.
They are all very careful to speak clearly and slowly into the microphone source which does
mitigate
against a naturally flowing dramatic scene, but the play is a sturdy and fun warhorse so one can enjoy oneself if one's expectations are not too high.
He doesn't slip on the banana peel of useless pathetic scenes to extenuate Jazek's guilt and to
mitigate
the brutality of the crime, not interested at all in proximate psychological motivations to justify any display of extreme or violent behaviors and refusing to include any useless judicial proceedings.
A twist ending at the tail end of the picture does much to
mitigate
some of the silliness and illogic that had come before, and even becomes very P.C. in its treatment of the overweight Saloma.
Lex Luther was perfectly cast, and even some of the shows weaker points, such as the budget special effects, did not
mitigate
the show severely.
The problems are not going to be solved by pointing fingers and expecting our governments to
mitigate
the problem, the problem lies within us as consumers!
And, of course, he should work to
mitigate
the risk that Russia creates a permanent zone of military tension along its borders with NATO.
Even without government support, however, farmers can take modest and cost-effective steps immediately to
mitigate
climate shocks.
In addition to its verification mandate, the CTBT monitoring system also helps to
mitigate
disasters.
Not only did they fail to
mitigate
the risks, underscored in the 2007 collapse, that new retail investors introduce into the market; they actually exacerbated them, by allowing, and even encouraging, those investors to accumulate leverage through margin buying.
As previous crises have shown, and as the current downturn in China has highlighted, steps must be taken to
mitigate
market risks.
Moreover, there is no reason why we cannot construct rules and responsibilities to
mitigate
the political risk of excessive use.
The lesson of Japan – but not only Japan – is clear: It is better to recognize the technical case for monetary finance and
mitigate
the political dangers than to prohibit its use entirely and pile up still greater dangers for the future.
Loan buy-downs could
mitigate
dwindling flows of official development assistance (ODA) for education in low-income countries, which declined by 10% from 2010 to 2011 – and by 5% for basic education.
To
mitigate
this risk, we should advance a concrete goal: the re-launch of arms control in Europe as a tried and tested means of risk-reduction, transparency, and confidence building between Russia and the West.
But the region’s Islamist parties appear to be conscious of these risks, and determined to
mitigate
them.
With its ability to mobilize large financial resources and buttress policy credibility, the IMF can help
mitigate
the large economic and social costs often associated with crises.
Instead, they have actively worked to block efforts to
mitigate
climate change at the national and international levels, including by funding climate-change deniers and lobbying against renewable-energy targets and successful instruments like feed-in tariffs.
In order to
mitigate
the risk associated with these debt-funded loan purchases, the PBOC guaranteed the AMC bonds.
Likewise, it is in the EU’s interest to
mitigate
not only the economic impact, but also the reputational damage implied by the loss of a major member state.
As a result, exchange-rate depreciation could
mitigate
the fallout for growth, particularly in countries with credible inflation-targeting regimes.
The Green Climate Fund, established by the United Nations to help developing countries
mitigate
CO2 emissions and adapt to climate change, should include provisions specifically for indigenous people, along the lines of the Climate Investment Fund’s Dedicated Grant Mechanism.
It is time for our leaders to recognize new systemic risks and work together to
mitigate
them.
With developing countries finding it difficult to deter massive capital inflows or
mitigate
the effects – owing to economic constraints, like high inflation, or to domestic politics – the “currency wars” metaphor, coined in 2010 by Brazil’s finance minister, Guido Mantega, has resonated widely.
But Citigroup’s success in lobbying for the rule’s repeal could also signal that regulatory efforts to
mitigate
systemic financial risk have reached the high-water mark in the US.
Deepening the economic and financial linkages among countries was viewed as the best way to deliver durable gains, enhance efficiency and productivity, and
mitigate
the threat of financial instability.
Unlike in the past, however, emerging and developing countries avoided the worst, precisely because they had learned to accumulate foreign reserves and regulate cross-border capital flows, and to ease such measures to prevent or
mitigate
sudden stops.
In Trump’s hands, a constitutional power intended to
mitigate
the “necessary severity” of criminal justice was deployed to sanction cruelty by a sworn officer of the law.
Only a patient, creative, and consistent engagement strategy will
mitigate
fears on both sides.
They may
mitigate
the consequences of peak prices, but they are inadequate to avoiding the recurrence of shocks, which can be accomplished if the G-20 acts on eight priorities.
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