Projects
in sentence
2702 examples of Projects in a sentence
The most important factor is the acceleration in India’s economic growth, which the International Monetary Fund
projects
will exceed 7.5% through 2020.
Nonetheless, concerns about the future of clean tech have made new
projects
more difficult to finance.
There were massive transfers, and national resources were devoted to gigantic infrastructure
projects.
New
projects
are now being prepared in Mozambique and Tanzania to provide customary settlements with communal titles that will ensure legal recognition of their common holdings, thereby strengthening the protection and management of these assets.
To try to compensate for these perturbed weather patterns, Chinese officialdom has launched an unprecedented array of costly
projects.
If true, China will never resolve droughts such as the current one in Guizhou by itself, regardless of how many large-scale engineering
projects
the government undertakes, or how well organized remedial efforts are.
After all, many of the advanced-country banks, especially in Europe, that dominated such investment – for example, financing large-scale infrastructure
projects
– are undergoing deep deleveraging and rebuilding their capital buffers.
But investors are reluctant to finance long-term projects, let alone cover the incremental costs of green initiatives, which are projected to add at least another 14% to a $100 trillion climate bill by 2030.
The dam
projects
have also become a focal point for a broader political debate within the Chinese media.
But even in many countries in those regions, Chinese practices like importing labor for infrastructure
projects
are unpopular.
The Catalyst Trust is also looking at
projects
to rethink school auditing, spur social-impact investing in the education sector, and introduce curricula to encourage inter-faith coexistence.
Any
projects
the Catalyst Trust supports will have to prove their scalability and share the goal of providing universal education, for the first time, to an entire generation of young people.
In another effort, the Catalyst Trust is looking at pilot
projects
in human-rights education across Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the United States to determine how school curricula can best cultivate inter-faith understanding.
But education for displaced people is lost in this framework between humanitarian aid, which focuses on immediate needs such as food and shelter, and development aid, which targets longer-term
projects.
There are many worthy
projects
that deserve consideration by organizations such as Catalyst.
Powerful white men, it is suggested, do not like to sign their names to
projects
or enterprises in trouble, and they are often happy to have the cosmetic benefit of a female – or nonwhite – face at the helm, when the real power may be draining away behind the scenes, or moving on elsewhere.
These
projects
are justified by the fact that three-quarters of all international trade is made up of inputs that contribute to the production of finished products further down the line.
And capital markets are a resource-mobilization system that provides money to those companies and
projects
that are expected to be profitable – that is, the ones that respond adequately to market prices.
The money would be given to developing countries to finance their development programs as well as global public goods like environmental projects, health initiatives, humanitarian assistance, and so on.
A new institutional arrangement might entail the creation of a set of trust funds - say, for education or health, or the environment - with competition among countries for
projects
helping to promote these objectives.
In fact, the panel called these ventures – including the Kyoto Protocol – “bad projects” because they cost more than the good they do.
With today’s ultra-low interest rates and high unemployment, public investment is cheap and plenty of
projects
offer high returns: fixing bridges and roads, updating badly outmoded electricity grids, and improving mass-transportation systems, to take just a few notable examples.
And that requires much more than just tweaking public spending and introducing some high-tech infrastructure projects; it means recreating the basis for a more dynamic society.
One of our largest
projects
is in Burkina Faso, a desperately poor country in West Africa where an estimated 55% of the population is food insecure for at least a portion of the year.
In a scene reminiscent of the intergalactic assembly in Star Wars, participants sat at a large table encircling a map of Eurasia to discuss the emerging world order, great power rivalries, sanction wars, nuclear proliferation, and regional integration
projects.
In both 2008 and 2012, Copenhagen Consensus
projects
focusing on global development priorities concluded that policymakers and philanthropists should make fighting malnourishment a top priority.
In each of these projects, experts wrote dozens of research papers examining how best to spend resources on a variety of issues, from armed conflict and biodiversity destruction to infectious disease and sanitation.
The two most recent Copenhagen Consensus
projects
focused on Bangladesh and Haiti.
China is also working on “connectivity”
projects
– namely, a rail and highway network – aimed at boosting economic and social ties between China and the ASEAN countries.
The Myitsone and Mekong incidents have now cast a shadow over these projects, fueling fear of a chain reaction that could wreck China’s two-decade-long effort to achieve deeper regional integration.
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