Sentences with phrase «rising over the rest of the year»

The Mauna Loa CO2 record is a saw - tooth pattern, with CO2concentrations typically falling from May through September, and rising over the rest of the year.

Not exact matches

CASE: The fund came out of our work around Rise of the Rest over the last four years where we've visited 33 cities, completed six different tours, and met a lot of entrepreneurs and regional investors.
Miller said the outlook for the rest of the year is unclear, but said sales are unlikely to surge over 2016 — especially if interest rates continue to rise.
Perth's small business count rose by 0.5 per cent over the five year study period, but the number of small businesses in the rest of the state fell by 1.5 per cent.
I absolutely do not believe that mutual funds are a better investment than individual stocks (companies that pay rising dividends over time) over the long run, so I invest the rest of my savings in a taxable account (as well as maxing out my Roth IRA every year, of which individual stocks are purchased).
Rounding out the rest of the top five were Dallas; Columbus, Ohio; and Tampa, Florida, which saw home prices rise more than 12 percent year over year.
NYC Comptroller Scott Stringer's annual budget grew at twice the rate of the rest of the government over the last two years, rising from $ 71 million in fiscal 2013, when his predecessor, John Liu, was in charge, to $ 86 million in fiscal 2015, a 21 percent jump.
In the astrophysics division, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) still dominates: It will receive $ 620 million in funding towards its 2018 launch, while the rest of the division gets $ 730 million, a rise of 6.7 % over previous years.
Over the past 30 years, the British - born independent curator and former New York gallerist has exhibited almost psychic tendencies when it comes to alerting the rest of the world to rising stars.
The rest of the rise has been over the last 27 years between 1980 and 2007.
The success of standards and other energy efficiency efforts is a significant factor in California's per capita electricity use remaining flat over the last 40 years while the rest of the country's use continues to rise.
You may wonder why the government finds the need to pursue such action since 1) U.S. carbon dioxide emissions have already topped out and have generally been on the decline for the past 7 - 8 years or so (from technological advances in natural gas extraction and a slow economy more so than from already - enacted government regulations and subsidies); 2) greenhouse gases from the rest of the world (primarily driven by China) have been sky - rocketing over the same period, which lessens any impacts that our emissions reduction have); and 3) even in their totality, U.S. carbon dioxide emissions have a negligible influence on local / regional / global climate change (even a immediate and permanent cessation of all our carbon dioxide emissions would likely result in a mitigation of global temperature rise of less than one - quarter of a degree C by the end of the century).
I believe that the answer to this is YES, like the rest of the front range and Denver metro, I believe that these areas are going to continue to grow rapidly over the next few years, and that values will rise faster than inflation here in the front range of Colorado over the next 30 years, and compare favorably to much of the rest of the United States.
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