Sentences with phrase «report predicts a rise»

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 previous report predicted a rise of 7 - 23 inches (18 - 59 centimeters).

Not exact matches

Rose - Martel put out a report in January predicting Gildan would do well in the new era of tougher Chinese competition, and she made some money for the clients who followed her advice.
The report also predicted the value of assets under management would rise to $ 145.4 trillion by 2025, but said fewer firms would be managing far more assets.
Data storage provider Nimble Storage saw its shares rise about 2 percent after it reported an adjusted second - quarter loss of 10 cents a share, narrower than the loss of 11 cents a share analysts were predicting.
Cambridge Analytica, which rose to prominence through its work with Mr. Trump's 2016 election campaign, has found itself confronting a deepening crisis since reports this past weekend in The New York Times and The Observer of London that the firm had harvested the data from more than 50 million Facebook profiles in its bid to develop techniques for predicting the behavior of individual American voters.
The 2010 Simpson - Bowles report on fiscal reform predicts that if interest rates rise, which seems inevitable, our country's annual interest payments could increase to $ 1 trillion, meaning our annual deficit will be $ 2 trillion.
At the end of 2015, we reported that many economists and housing analysts were predicting a gradual rise in mortgage rates during 2016.
Two weeks ago, we reported that financial analysts were predicting a gradual rise in mortgage rates during 2016.
The EIA in February reported that Canada pumped an average of 4.5 million barrels a day in 2015, and predicted this would rise to 4.8 million in 2017 as oil sands projects under construction when oil prices began to fall in 2014 come on line.
Currently sitting at around $ 30 - 35 a barrel, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce's Crystal Ball Report predicts that, with supply set to exceed demand, the price of oil will likely average around $ 35 per barrel throughout 2016, before rising back to around $ 55 throughout 2017.
In our last report, we predicted contributions to donor - advised fund would continue to rise but at a slower rate.
The economists at the real estate brokerage Redfin recently predicted that U.S. home prices would rise by 5.3 % during 2017, which would be very close to the 5.5 % year - over-year gain they reported for 2016.
So the alarmist community has reacted predictably by issuing ever more apocalyptic statements, like the federal report» Global Change Impacts in the United States» issued last week which predicts more frequent heat waves, rising water temperatures, more wildfires, rising disease levels, and rising sea levels — headlined, in a paper I read, as «Getting Warmer.»
Cambridge Analytica, which rose to prominence through its work with Mr. Trump's 2016 election campaign, has found itself confronting a deepening crisis since reports this past weekend in The New York Times and The Observer of London that the firm had harvested the data from more than 50 million Facebook profiles in its bid to develop techniques for predicting the behavior of individual American voters.
The extra money comes in the wake of a government report predicting alarming rises in obesity among young people over the coming years.
Laaksonen and his colleagues did not try to predict how Finland's temperatures will change in the coming decades, but according to the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's latest report, Arctic temperatures are likely to continue rising faster than the global average through the end of the 21st century.
A separate report indicated that the rate of global sea - level rise had accelerated during the 20th century; if it continues as predicted, by 2100 seas will lap shores 12 inches higher than they did in 1990.
The M.I.T. report predicts that even if the world's fleet of more than 400 nuclear power plants grew to be 4,000 such plants that then operated for a century, the cost of the electricity from those facilities would rise by a mere 1 percent as a result of the increased demand for uranium.
In its last major report, released in 2007, the IPCC predicted seas would rise between 7 and 23 inches by 2100 — but couched that estimate with a giant caveat.
With a report by marketing research firm Gartner Inc predicting that 6.4 billion smart devices and appliances will be connected to the Internet by 2016, and will rise to 20.8 billion devices by 2020, reducing network traffic will be a priority for most companies.
The report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is expected to predict the loss of thousands of species in temperature - sensitive biodiversity hotspots such as the Great Barrier Reef, off the east coast of Australia, if temperatures go on rising.
That estimate is an increase from the estimated 0.9 to 2.7 feet (0.3 to 0.8 meters) that was predicted in the 2007 IPCC report for future sea - level rise.
Small Market, Beat Reporting Special Citation — Colleen Gillard, Lucy Hood, Patti Hartigan, Laura Pappano, Brigid Schulte, David McKay Wilson, The Harvard Education Letter, Harvard Education Letter's Education Coverage «Stopping Sexual Harassment in Middle School» by Colleen Gillard «The Greening of Environmental Ed» by Lucy Hood «Bringing Art into School, Byte by Byte» by Patti Hartigan «Integrated Data Systems Link Schools and Communities» by Patti Hartigan «Differentiated Instruction Reexamined» by Laura Pappano «Using Research to Predict Great Teachers» by Laura Pappano «Hybrid Schools for the iGeneration» by Brigid Schulte ««Clicks» Get Bricks» by Brigid Schulte «Leading a System Where Everyone Gains» by David McKay Wilson «With Cheating on the Rise Schools Respond» by David McKay Wilson
In case you're wondering how eReader sales are expected to stack up against tablets, a recent report from DisplaySearch predicts tablet sales will reach 60 million units this year rising to 330 million units by 2017.
Two weeks ago, we reported that financial analysts were predicting a gradual rise in mortgage rates during 2016.
At the end of 2015, we reported that many economists and housing analysts were predicting a gradual rise in mortgage rates during 2016.
The parliamentary budget office released a report Tuesday predicting the ratio of debt payments — including principal and interest payments — relative to disposable income will creep upwards over the next five years as interest rates rise.
But mortgage rates are expected to rise faster than bank deposit rates, amounting to a net negative for consumers, a report from MoneyRates.com predicts.
Nick O, # 65: Will the rate of sea level rise, due to ocean warming and thermal expansion, be somewhat faster than predicted in previous reports?
The two scientists report, in the journal Earth System Dynamics, that they looked at a series of climate change simulations and found seven that predicted more rain for the Sahel later in this century as temperatures rose beyond the 2 °C target: in some cases 40 % more rain, in other simulations up to 300 % more.
Not surprisingly, the IPCC's latest report, published in 2001, offers a wide range of predicted temperature rises, from 1.40 C to 5.80 C by the end of this century.
The maritime sector is responsible for 2 - 3 per cent of global emissions, but this is predicted to rise by 50 - 250 per cent by 2050 as global trade grows, according to a report by the IMO in 2014.
A new report by the Global Carbon Project, an international research consortium, predicts that carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels and industry will rise 2 per cent this year.
When Armour factored rising sensitivity into that 2013 observation - based Nature Geoscience report and recalculated climate sensitivity, he got a best estimate of 2.9 º C — a value well within the IPCC's consensus range and the range predicted by models.
«When scientists tell the public that sea levels will rise by several feet in the coming century, people's natural tendency to discount, compared with a long time scale, can make the predicted rise seem inconsequential,» notes the ecoAmerica / CRED report.
The loud divergence between sea - level reality and climate change theory — the climate models predict an accelerated sea - level rise driven by the anthropogenic CO2 emission — has been also evidenced in other works such as Boretti (2012a, b), Boretti and Watson (2012), Douglas (1992), Douglas and Peltier (2002), Fasullo et al. (2016), Jevrejeva et al. (2006), Holgate (2007), Houston and Dean (2011), Mörner 2010a, b, 2016), Mörner and Parker (2013), Scafetta (2014), Wenzel and Schröter (2010) and Wunsch et al. (2007) reporting on the recent lack of any detectable acceleration in the rate of sea - level rise.
Worse, the IPCC report shows that over the past 40 years, sea level has in fact risen 50 % more than predicted by its models — yet these same models are used uncorrected to predict the future!
In its latest report, the IPCC has predicted up to 59 cm of sea level rise by the end of this century.
The 2007 IPCC report predicts temperature rises of 1.1 - 6.4 °C (2 - 11.5 °F) by 2100.
In 2011, the International Energy Agency released a World Energy Outlook report describing «a golden age of gas» and predicting that gas production would rise by 50 percent over the next 25 years.
Although studies in the waters around Hawaii (Dore 2009) reported an increasing trend in DIC that was «indistinguishable» from what rising atmospheric CO2 predicts researchers observed, «Air - sea CO2 fluxes, while variable, did not appear to exert an influence on surface pH variability.
By the year 2100, the 2001 IPCC report predicted between 20 and 70 centimeters (cm) of sea level rise, while the 2007 report predicted between 18 and 59 cm over that timeframe, depending on how much greenhouse gas emissions change in the future.
Consistent with the previous analyses at Skeptical Science, RFC12 finds that the climate models used in the IPCC 2001 Third Assessment Report (TAR) and 2007 Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) predicted the ensuing global surface warming to a high degree of accuracy, while their central sea level rise predictions were too low by about 60 %.
Mayor Bloomberg Releases New York City Panel on Climate Change Report That Predicts Higher Temperatures and Rising Sea Levels For New York City (2009)
The 2007 IPCC report predicts temperature rise of 1.1 to 6.4 degrees Celsius by 2100.
The legislature on July 2 effectively nullified the state's own science panel's report predicting a 20 to 55 - inch rise in sea level.
The SPPI's Monthly CO2 Report for January, 2011 — Edited by Christopher Monckton — came to the conclusion that «Sea level continues to rise more slowly than the UN predicts
say it has been predicted that «the average temperature in the semiarid northwest portion of China in 2050 will be 2.2 °C higher than it was in 2002,» and they report that based on the observed results of their study, this increase in temperature «will lead to a significant change in the growth stages and water use of winter wheat,» such that «crop yields at both high and low altitudes will likely increase,» by 2.6 % at low altitudes and 6.0 % at high altitudes... Even without the benefits of the aerial fertilization effect and the anti-transpiration effect of the ongoing rise in the air's CO2 content, the increase in temperature that is predicted by climate models for the year 2050, if it ever comes to pass, will likely lead to increases in winter wheat production in the northwestern part of China, not the decreases that climate alarmists routinely predict
The IPCC reports predict that, if the temperature were to rise by 1 - 3C, there would be increased coral bleaching and widespread coral mortality unless corals could adapt or acclimatise, but while there is increasing evidence for climate change impacts on coral reefs the IPCC concluded that separating the impacts of climate change - related stresses from other stresses such as over-fishing and pollution was difficult.
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