Sentences with phrase «average global growth rate»

Ecommerce companies show robust double digit growth with an average global growth rate pegged at about 20 percent year on year.

Not exact matches

«I am happy to inform you that despite the general shrinking of the global economy by two per cent in year 2010 and a not too favourable outlook for 2012, Nigeria remains a growing economy, achieving an average growth rate of about six per cent in the last three years.
Experts at the Global Carbon Project and the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom found emissions globally could drop as much as 0.6 percent this year — after growing at that rate in 2014 — a sharp difference from the 2.4 percent annual growth rate the world has averaged in the past decade.
The campaign was founded in 2003 by 30 people with AU$ 54,000 in donations and has grown more steadily over the last 10 years to about 5 million global members, raising AU$ 136 million in 2014 with an average annual growth rate of over 100 % (ref.
China's coal demand growth averaged 9 % per year from 2000 to 2010, more than double the global growth rate of 4 % and significantly higher than global growth excluding China, which averaged only 1 %.
Outside of that group, all of the other countries currently have lower real rates relative to their pre-crisis average rate, either because of low interest rates or rising levels of inflation, suggesting potentially sluggish global growth going forward.
China is expecting 6.5 % GDP growth in 2017, more than double the expected growth rate in the U.S. and nearly double the global average.
According to Canadian ETF Outlook 2015, the global ETF market totalled US$ 2.86 trillion in AUM as of Aug. 31, and had an average annual growth rate of 24.2 % during the past 10 years.
The International Air Transport Association — a trade group for the world's airlines — said that global demand for air travel in 2015 jumped 6.5 percent over the previous year, a result that it said was the strongest since the world started pulling out of the Global Financial Crisis in 2010; that number was also well above the industry's 10 - year average growth rate of 5.5 peglobal demand for air travel in 2015 jumped 6.5 percent over the previous year, a result that it said was the strongest since the world started pulling out of the Global Financial Crisis in 2010; that number was also well above the industry's 10 - year average growth rate of 5.5 peGlobal Financial Crisis in 2010; that number was also well above the industry's 10 - year average growth rate of 5.5 percent.
The growth rate of global average atmospheric CO2 for 2000 — 2006 was 1.93 ppm y ^ -1 [or 4.1 petagrams of carbon (PgC) y ^ -1, Table 1].
But «in order to explain the drop in atmospheric growth rate of CO2, we would need an average drop in global temperatures of about 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 ° C), but the temperatures only dropped by about one degree (0.9) Fahrenheit (0.5 °C) globally.»
Global energy consumption grows 53 % between 2008 and 2035, representing an average annual growth rate of 1.6 %.
The numbers are striking: in the 1990s, as the market integration project ramped up, global emissions were going up an average of 1 percent a year; by the 2000s, with «emerging markets» like China now fully integrated into the world economy, emissions growth had sped up disastrously, with the annual rate of increase reaching 3.4 percent a year for much of the decade.
The annualised average growth rate in global CO2 emissions over the last three years of the credit crunch, including a 1 % increase in 2008 when the first impacts became visible, is 1.7 %, almost equal to the long - term annual average of 1.9 % for the preceding two decades back to 1990.
Slowing the growth rate of GHG emissions and then reversing it is the key to addressing climate change and keeping global average temperature below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels.
The researchers discovered a temperature increase of just 1 degree Celsius in near - surface air temperatures in the tropics leads to an average annual growth rate of atmospheric carbon dioxide equivalent to one - third of the annual global emissions from combustion of fossil fuels and deforestation combined.
There are two primary externalities that result from our emissions of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere — 1) an enhancement of the greenhouse effect, which results in an alteration of the energy flow in the earth's climate and a general tendency to warm the global average surface temperature, and 2) an enhancement of the rate of photosynthesis in plants and a general tendency to result in more efficient growth and an overall healthier condition of vegetation (including crops).
The 2007 IPCC report found that the cost of actions to stabilize concentrations of heat - trapping emissions at a level that gives us a good chance of avoiding dangerous warming would amount to less than a 0.12 percent reduction in average annual global gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate in 2050.
The chart on left plots the most up - to - date 15 - year average growth rates of CO2 emissions versus the global economy 15 - year average growth rates.
Even if we were to scale back a little, matching the recent average growth rate of 1.92 ppm / year, that puts us at 450 ppm around the year 2042 — 450 ppm signifying the likely point of no return, when the climate will trigger anywhere from 2 - 5 degrees centigrade bump in global temperatures.
After a long and stuttering recovery from the global financial crisis, the forecast in association with Oxford Economics, predicts an uptick in transactional activity, based on global economic activity increasing to an average growth rate of 2.9 % per year over the next three years, compared to an annualized 2.5 % since 2012.
As GFK data points out, the global average smartphone price has seen record growth, surging at rates fastest than ever.
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