Sentences with phrase «predicted rise»

Overall, 74 per cent of respondents predicted another rise in 2015, while a similar proportion, 73 per cent, paid bonuses to lawyers last year.
I am actually NOT the one who predicted the rise of enhanced content.
The supplier is even predicting a rise in the demand for 3D sensing modules in the next 5 to 8 years.
If those trends continue, it puts the world on track for the highest predicted rises in temperature and sea level.
Of necessity, those models show most of that warming going into the ocean, for if they did not they would predict rises in temperatures greater than 10 degrees C per decade.
This is how anyone paying attention to the growing push to use environmentally conscious products over the past 20 years could predict the rise of green pet cleaning products.
For instance, radiative transfer models (measuring heat balance) are quite well verified, and accurately predict the rise in the temperature (and hence energy) of the atmosphere as the CO2 level increases.
Indeed unless action is taken the formula market will as predicted rise by 55 % from US$ 45 billion to US$ 70 billion by 2019.»
At a Toronto Region Board of Trade event in November, Ruffolo predicted the rising popularity of enterpreneurship
However, even Rigg couldn't predict the rise of even better gear, such as thermal devices that can pick up on the human body's heat signature.
From The Independent: «The current refugee crisis marks a watershed moment in the history of global warming because it's the first wave of emigration to be explicitly linked to climate change, according to one leading scientist, who predicts rises in temperature and increasingly extreme weather will unleash many more mass movements of people in the future.»
At a Toronto Region Board of Trade event in November, Ruffolo predicted the rising popularity of enterpreneurship and the increasing desire of young workers for control over their careers will result in a revolution in the way companies operate.
The report predicts a rise in global temperatures of between 0.3 and 4.8 degrees Celsius (0.5 to 8.6 Fahrenheit) and a rise of up to 82 cm (32 inches) in sea levels by the late 21st century due to melting ice and expansion of water as it warms, threatening coastal cities from Shanghai to San Francisco.
The climate experts predict a rise in sea level of between 0.09 and 0.9 meters (3 inches to 3 feet) over the next 100 years if nothing is done to curtail the emission of greenhouse gases.
Among other things, my track record on predicting rising oil prices demonstrated that the traditional laws of supply and demand were no longer working for one of the economy's most basic and essential commodities.
Economists predict rising home prices and more development for Orange County real estate.
In December 2014, Wall Street analysts predicted a rise in interest rates.
Just as we were ridding the world of Kaiser and Czar, Spengler predicted the rise of Caesarism.
Notwithstanding failures to predict rising immigration on its watch, and Gordon Brown's disastrous «bigoted woman» gaffe, the Labour party is not solely to blame for the effects of the multiculturalism that makes many Britons feel like strangers in their own land.
Harry Fletcher from the National Association of Probation Officers (NAPO) union predicts a rise in prison numbers after cuts to police and probation numbers.
CBI Director General John Cridland predicted a rise in unemployment and was then asked to give a score out of ten for the coalition government record on the economy.
They thrived in temperatures of up to 21 °C and atmospheric CO2 concentrations of up to 780 parts per million — beyond predicted rises for the next century (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 / pnas.0811143106).
A new study estimates that tobacco smoking has been linked to approximately 2 million deaths among adult men and women in Asia in recent years and predicts a rising death toll.
The IPCC predicts a rise in global mean temperatures of anything between 1.5 degree C and 4.5 degree C within the next century.
Economists usually predict a rising interest rate fights inflation.
Commissioned by ATM, the Colliers International data predicts the rise will be fuelled by visitors from across the GCC, who accounted for 48 per cent of guests in 2017.
At a time when the northern hemisphere was cooling and the global mean temperature still below the values of the early 1940s, they confidently predicted a rise in temperature due to increasing CO2 emissions.
The IPCC estimates that sea levels could be 3 feet higher in 2100, while Hansen and his colleagues predict a rise of at least twice that amount.
A pre-Fukushima scenario from the International Energy Agency that allowed for a little more action on carbon dioxide than has yet been taken predicted a rise of about 70 % in nuclear capacity between 2010 and 2035; since other generating capacity will be growing too, that would keep nuclear's 13 % share roughly constant.
Looking forward, climate researchers have already predicted a rise in global temperatures to occur over the course of centuries, not the relatively gradual warming which occurred over thousands of years in the case Paleocene - Eocene Thermal Maximum.
Partners predict rise in transatlantic mergers will pile pressure on traditional firms.
Among other developments, Nerland predicts a rise in the number of international mergers.
Last year, the same tipster predicted a Rose Gold colour for the iPhone X. However, no such thing happened.
While in absolute terms, this represents a decline of one or two percent for the both of them, it does not necessarily predict a rise or fall in the next day or two.
The UK's largest craft retailer predicts the rise of more specialist crafts as the nation becomes a little more adventurous and creative this year.
The June increase in the consumer price index is not expected to have a significant impact on markets, as economists had accurately predicted the rise.
These latest results also run counter to the IPCC's own recent estimates, which predicted a rise in sea levels of about 3 inches (7.6 cm) this century (much too low, it now appears).
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