Sentences with phrase «even bigger uncertainty»

Not exact matches

Compare this to five years ago when economic uncertainty was their biggest concern or even just last year when only 39 % were very confident about growth.
The biggest uncertainty to that question is that fact that we do not even know if Arsene Wenger will be the manager of Arsenal come the summer.
With uncertainty surrounding Howard, public bettors are wary to take Orlando on the road, even though it's the biggest spread of the Christmas Day games.
New York is short $ 4.4 billion, and there's uncertainty over federal policies, including the overhaul of the tax code, that could leave the state with even a bigger budget hole in the future.
Although the Season Four cliffhanger casts uncertainty on just how long she'll hold that position, it's a clever way of shaking up the status quo and providing an even bigger stage for Selina and her team's merry - go - round of failure and humiliation.
In a few years, you won't even remember what the piece of paper said as life has a great way of working out and sometimes the uncertainty of life leads to your biggest adventures.
I think it's safe to say that 2017 is looking like it's going to be a year of big changes and perhaps some uncertainty that will have even the top - selling indie authors shifting nervously in their seats.
While many people approaching retirement have actively adjusted their retirement plan to take into account recent economic uncertainty and market volatility, few recognize that an even bigger threat to their retirement nest egg is unrealistic expectations.
Yet despite this Elfish Defence that Curry seems to cultivate, I'm of the opinion that even with all the Uncertainty Elves, Curry's Big Natural Oscillation can be shown to be as ill - founded as cosmic rays, cloud irises etc, etc..
Pieter Tans of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration stressed the persistent uncertainty in the range of warming expected from a buildup of greenhouse gases as cutting against the idea of specific thresholds: «Our biggest science problem is that we do not know how strong the climate feedbacks are, or even whether we know all of the ones that are important on decadal and longer time scales,» he said in an e-mail.
In climate the uncertainty is even bigger and we are faced with prescriptions (shut off all power plants, pump CO2 underground, etc) with NO WAY to evaluate these remedies for 100 years.
Thirdly, even though in science the «uncertainty» monster and his bigger brother the «I don't know the answer» monster roam iin full view to any observer, highly exaggerated information is still passed on to policy makers leading them to believe they have 5000 or 100 days to save the world.
To the extent the climate policy debate can be analogized to building a bridge, it is the «consensus» advocates who want to do the building, and have embraced uncertainty as a justification for building an even bigger untried bridge.
Seems to me like the biggest risk is represented by allowing existing uncertainties to prevent us from even developing the capacity to implement policies should uncertainty be reduced.
Judith often writes about the «uncertainty monster» but it seems to me there is an even bigger beast «the exaggeration monster» which takes snippets of possible facts or unlikely statements and turns them into «science is settled» papers that reinforce the climate change narrative demonstrating AGW.
The 20th century temperature uptick is so big, it would be very hard to hide even with low resolution proxies and dating uncertainty.
But isn't there somewhere still too big an abyss of uncertainty as definitely for ten years, since 2001, maybe even since 1997 or 1998 the temperatures have not risen (and this year, at least now, is not shaping up as a hot year) while CO2 levels have grown with business as usual.
While the IPCC approach to uncertainty could be improved, getting coastal planning to take account of even 0.5 m SLR seems an even bigger challenge.
A main purpose of the original publication had been to establish the limits of uncertainty, but even if publications did show the broad gray band of shading, it was easy to overlook that it might conceal big climate shifts.
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