Sentences with phrase «economic blow»

We can begin to improve agricultural nutrient - use efficiencies and reduce industrial forms of nitrogen and phosphorus with current knowledge and technology and without suffering major economic blows.
There is some hope though as presidential candidate TheDon Trumpcard announced he was going to build a wall around the airports preventing frequent flyers from ever cashing in their miles, thus saving the potential economic blow to his stimulus plan for «Making Frequent Flyer Programs Great Again».
The second forecast assumes the UK will leave the single market entirely, delivering a much more significant economic blow to the country.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency decision drew applause from Connecticut's congressional delegation and state officials who argued that halting dredge disposal in the eastern Sound would be a damaging economic blow for shoreline communities in this state.
Coffee is the second most valuable commodity exported by developing nations, so any decrease in exports would be a huge economic blow, not to mention a loss of important jobs among many of the world's poorest laborers and farmers.
«The Sierra Club and its allies don't just want to outlaw the Keystone Pipeline (which would be in itself a horrible economic blow), they want to outlaw all fossil fuels.»
The past 5 years of austerity have seen the Greeks suffer a crushing economic blow.
When asked about the potential major economic blow a full boycott would generate, Magavern called it «deservedly so.»
The economic blow of a Greek exit from the euro zone would be bumpy, but probably not fatal for Europe.
But now the Trump administration has decided to revive the old law to launch an investigation and potentially deal an economic blow to Beijing.
They have called the White House, the Treasury Department and Congress in a furious push to soften the economic blow.
While the closure of FitzPatrick would be an economic blow to the region, it would also impact the reliability of our electric grid.
SYDNEY (Reuters)- Australia faces a A$ 17 billion ($ 13.3 billion) exodus of investment from its windfarm industry because of a political deadlock, threatening to deal the country a major economic blow and kill hopes of meeting a self - imposed clean energy target.
Some of the revenue generated by such a tax could be used to cushion the economic blow suffered by low - income households as well as coal mining communities.
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