Sentences with phrase «likely be the tipping point»

Not exact matches

It's more likely, in my view, that investors have simply been getting closer to their «tipping point,» and that small further increases from here may have disproportionately large effects.
«But it appears we've reached a tipping point where the housing market is likely to slide toward improved affordability over the next couple of years.
Still, my impression is that fresh economic weakness could prove to be a tipping point, and that both investors and the public should understand that they are likely to pay terribly for the current abundance of apparently free lunches.
One may hope that The Tipping Point is not likely to reach the tipping point of influencing many people in their thinking about the human conTipping Point is not likely to reach the tipping point of influencing many people in their thinking about the human condiPoint is not likely to reach the tipping point of influencing many people in their thinking about the human contipping point of influencing many people in their thinking about the human condipoint of influencing many people in their thinking about the human condition.
«If this is allowed to continue unchecked then a tipping point may be reached whereby prisons are more likely to become unstable than stable.
To deny the likelihood of an impending global tipping point is not to deny that we are transforming the biosphere profoundly and permanently in ways that are likely to disgrace us in the eyes of future generations.
Video interviewing tips are important because today's Skype interview is just the tip of the iceberg for the wholesale change that will likely occur when nearly 100 % of employers use these services at one point or another of the hiring process, not just the approximately 60 % who use them sporadically today.
They can include not only a genetic predisposition, but also food sensitivities (gluten and dairy being the most common offenders), environmental chemicals (such as those found in plastics), leaky gut, viral or bacterial infections, brain injury or degeneration, and, when a woman's immune system is already likely at the tipping point, pregnancy.
Though SGP is a portion of a teacher's evaluation, it will likely be the determining factor because its volatility will make it the tipping point in a rating.
Despite the delaying tactics large publishers have been using to slow ebook growth, it's likely that in 2011 we'll see ebooks hit a tipping point where most big box bookstores will no longer be financially viable, and will close or move to smaller locations.
Tip # 1: Book all travel on this card; if you start splitting between multiple cards, you are likely going to lose out on extra points as this is a very rewarding card in the travel sector!
While young consumers are likely to benefit the most from Creditnet's credit building infographic, any consumer looking for the simple bullet points when it comes to improving credit scores are sure to gain helpful tips and advice.
What's more likely however is that you'd earn more on the money in an investment account, but there'll be some tipping point on how much to put towards each, so you'll have to reason it out.
Hot Tip: Be aware that when you are booking hotels on Amex Travel, you will most likely not earn hotel points or receive any perks for your elite status (as opposed to booking directly with the hotel).
Tip # 1: Book all travel on this card; if you start splitting between multiple cards, you are likely going to lose out on extra points as this is a very rewarding card in the travel sector!
This year, people sort of reached a tipping point with regard to lockboxes and cash shops, which is likely why GW2 lost out to the 2 sub model games for the Business Model award.
If you were an early adopter to the PS Vita, it was more than likely that Assassin's Creed Liberation was the tipping point for your purchase.
Now today, 2018 is critical and the next couple of years as well are far above «truly critical» tipping point of no return — that «battle / argument» has already been lost with the most likely outcome being inaction, denial and ongoing minimisation by those with the only institutional political power to engender change leaving nothing much more and a reliance on a forlorn unrealistic impractical hope» alone.
However nothing is fixed, and because renewable energy has fallen so much in price, and because of the recent record setting temperatures, the views of the public and politicians are likely near a major tipping point of change.
I'm interested in this, even though I understand we are not very likely to reach a tipping point in this century which might lead to such a runaway GW scenario, but it motivates me all the more to reduce my GHGs.
Talk of a tipping point, a point - of - no - return, etc. is only too likely to encourage this fallacy.
The myriad influences on the health of ecosystems (habitat loss, logging, urbanization, species introduction etc. as well as climate change) means that it is most likely here that the tipping point concept will be most applicable.
However, the tipping points are approaching and once they are passed it may take a long time (in our layperson's scheme of things) for bad things to happen, but we will have very likely ensured that they will happen — if not to us, then to our progeny.
I'd say it'd be more apocalyptic (as per Dr. Venkman's «dogs and cats, living together» dictum) if the animals were migrating to environments * more * likely to result in their extinction;) Having said that, I acknowledge that a common view is that humanity is doing exactly that — not a physical migration, but an enforced anthropogenic man - handling of the entire biosphere towards a bad neighborhood in Earth's «state space», where we risk being stabbed by shadowy tipping points, mugged by run - away processes and distressed at the sight of an anoxic ocean vomiting over the local fauna.
Even the latter might in theory lead to tipping points with abrupt climate shifts, but based on paleoclimatologic history, these are far more likely to be in the same direction as the trends than in the opposite direction.
The IPCC has backed off talk of tipping points and irreversible climate change, though I get the impression that may be a political calculation — in line with Lacis's peeve that «likely» and «most likely» are weasel constructions for appearance's sake.
Of course Ferdinand is right not to project catastrophism onto anthropogenic CO2 levels for as you likely know there is a inverse logarithmic relationship between changes in temperature and CO2 levels such that without the assumed positive feedback from water vapour there is no chance of runaway global warming, tipping points or whatever.
We are very likely at a tipping point, and prudence therefore dictates drastic reductions in greenhouse - gas emissions over the next 10 years.»
The slowdown in this current, the study finds, is unprecedented in hundreds to perhaps as long as 1,000 years, and is most likely related to another tipping point, which is the melting of the Greenland ice sheet.
An AGW tipping point is most likely going to be caused by coal - powered energy generation coming out of the developing BRICA world (BRZ, RUS, IND, PRC and ARAB).
To the extent that we accept the notion of tipping points, there are likely to be several rather than one.
This leads most to believe that most model runs for the likely scenarios predicted by the IPCC (2 X CO2, etc.) will predict the results to 2100 and beyond fairly accurately (barring any tipping points occurring, which is increasingly likely).
We also discuss why, in contrast to Arctic summer sea ice, a tipping point is more likely to exist for the loss of the Greenland ice sheet and the West Antarctic ice sheet.
Once this tipping point is reached in an area, anaerobic processes would be expected to dominate resulting in a likely increase in the production of the greenhouse gas N2O.
It is impossible to know how close we are to that tipping point, but it could well occur during this century, and a decline in available energy is likely to be the key driving factor.
By the time the next is published in 2012, whether we have passed a tipping point WRT the Arctic will likely be a fact of history.
It's yet another mostly incomprehensible tipping point to look out for on the horizon — since we're likely to keep developing the natural landscape at roughly the same rate (if not faster) well into the future, we should hit that 50 percent mark pronto.
The current level of LT temperatures are not likely in the least to produce an imminent global warming catastrophe, nor a feared «tipping point
This discussion on tipping points seems to assume on realclimate's stance on them is that tipping points are not likely to happen?
«Tipping point» has a more ambiguous meaning... if such a state is a likely outcome, is it «bad,» «good,» or neither?
While I agree with you that we are very likely committed to a future in which the Arctic will be nearly ice - free in September, I don't agree that that constitutes a «tipping point».
As global temperatures increase, we are very likely to see «tipping points,» where the climate - system shifts from one stable situation to another stable situation.
A tipping point can be passed (and most likely several have been passed now with the Arctic melting fast) where the changes happen so fast that global average temperatures could rise rapidly.
From a timing perspective, this appeal to the Federal Circuit is most likely Microsoft's nearest - term opportunity to prove Android's infringement of more of its U.S. patents and to reach a tipping point at which Google, Motorola Mobility's owner, may agree that a royalty - bearing license deal is the commercially most intelligent choice.
The tipping point for each individual user — if, indeed, one occurs — will likely be when a service they already rely upon and have built trust with is added to the roster.
And now, likely, you're at a tipping point where it's bad enough, or anxiety provoking enough, to come clean.
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