Parliamentarians, you gather
today with the high confidence and higher expectation of Canadians.
Not exact matches
Today's investor has to balance recent market
highs with growing geopolitical uncertainties capable of disrupting investor
confidence and the economy.
Form should go out of the window
with so much at stake for our side
today however, but
confidence will be
high, and that should prove enough to win the match, especially
with our rivals stuck in seventh in the division regardless of the result.
And
today we learn that the Government is so unhappy
with the banks» failure to make enough loans to business that it has set
higher targets - notwithstanding reports of low demand for lending due to lack of business
confidence.
Do I know the intrinsic value of the business
today and,
with a
high degree of
confidence, how it is likely to change over the next few years?
My take is that the tug of war over what's causing
today's telegenic heat waves, floods, tempests — and even Arctic sea - ice retreats — distracts from the
high confidence scientists have in the long - term (but less sexy) picture: that more CO2 will lead to centuries of climate and coastal changes
with big consequences for a growing human population (for better and worse in the short run, and likely mostly for the worse in the long run).
Hansen, writing in the New York Times
today, «say
with high confidence» that recent heat waves in Texas and Russia «were not natural events» but actually «caused by human - induced climate change»?
-- > «The biggest mystery in climate science
today may have begun, unbeknownst to anybody at the time,
with a subtle weakening of the tropical trade winds blowing across the Pacific Ocean in late 1997... Average global temperatures hit a record
high in 1998 — and then the warming stalled... But the pause has persisted, sparking a minor crisis of
confidence in the field.
[31] About Greenland IPCC SPM § B4 states: «we can say
with a very
high confidence level that the maximum mean sea level during the last interglacial (129 ka to 116 ka) has been at least 5 m above
today's seal level....
«NOAA's prediction for the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season is for 12 to15 tropical storms,
with seven to nine becoming hurricanes, of which three to five could become major hurricanes,» said retired Navy Vice Adm. Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Ph.D., undersecretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator at a news conference
today in Bay St. Louis, Miss. «Forecaster
confidence that this will be an active hurricane season is very
high.»
In the almost sure knowledge that the earth never experienced a runaway greenhouse even
with ancient CO2 levels 10 to 20 times greater than
today, these anti-science scoundrels insist
with a «
high level of
confidence» that this amplification is real and it's based on nothing more than faster than expected surface temperature rise in the past few decades which can be TOTALLY explained by multi-decadal cyclic behavior in ocean currents, trade winds, and / or solar magnetic activity causing small global average albedo changes.