Sentences with phrase «mean less danger»

«Less ice doesn't mean less danger.

Not exact matches

That means less potential danger to the larger economy from a sudden event, such as was seen when the Dotcom bubble popped in 2000.
Anyone who uses alcohol as a persistent means of interpersonal adjustment — who drinks regularly to allow himself to be more aggressive in his work or less shy at social functions — is in danger.
No, I mean the less immediately life - threatening danger that typical potato salads present to those of us who love, love, love them but don't love the added fat they normally are bathed in.
In addition to finding that room sharing might mean less sleep for both parents and babies, the study also found that room sharing might be associated with some dangers.
This does not, of course, mean that they should not be used, but it does mean that there is a danger in viewing the laptop less as a means to express a view, and more as a «second ballot box» because, unlike an actual ballot box, it is simply not available to everybody.
Such a distributed system would also mean that each individual laser could be less powerful, reducing any possible danger from the beams to other aircraft or birds.
What this also means is that there's no danger of the Marvel films becoming less entangled with each other.
However, when your account is delinquent and in danger of not being collected, the creditor might want to recoup as much of your balance as possible, even if it means accepting less than what's owed.
Being a deaf cat just means it isn't well - suited to spend time outside unsupervised, since it is less likely to be aware of potential dangers that would otherwise be audible to hearing cats.
The increased levels of carbonic acid in the water means there are less carbonate ions available in seawater for making shells, meaning that thousands of species that build shells or skeletons from calcium carbonate are in danger of extinction.
The utility mercury rule Holmstead favored and admitted to initiating was a less stringent (in fact, illegal) cap and trade method under a different section of the Clean Air Act (subsection 111 instead of 112), which meant downgrading EPA's opinion of mercury's danger as a toxin.
If all you want to do is implement a less stringent alternative like the Ceres Clean Trillion plan, which will yield ~ 1.5 % non-compounded annual reductions in emissions for decades, and give you an 80 % chance of staying below 2 C (based on models that do not include the major carbon feedbacks, which means an underestimation of the danger), recognize that you are proposing entre into a regime that has been described as Extremely Dangerous.
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