Voorbeelden van het gebruik van Billion banknotes in het Engels en hun vertalingen in het Nederlands
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More than 8 billion banknotes in circulation are €50 banknotes, representing about 45% of the total.
The two printing works entrusted with their production must deliver, by 1 January 2002, 4.3 billion banknotes.
At the end of 2007 some 12 billion banknotes were in circulation, with a value of close to Euros 677 billion. .
14.9 billion banknotes were printed.
Estimates as at end-2001 amounted to some 15 billion banknotes, with a total face value of around Euros 633 billion. .
About 14.5 billion banknotes will be printed by the end of 2001 in twelve printing works in the euro zone, including Greece.
An additional production volume, amounting to 1.91 billion banknotes, was subsequently approved by the ECB 's Governing Council.
Some 13 billion banknotes and 56 billion coins will be needed by 1 January 2002, the date on which both notes and coins are to be put into circulation.
As a rough indication, in 2011, the national central banks deemed 5.9 billion banknotes unfit for circulation
At the end of 2001, more than 15 billion banknotes had already been printed by fifteen different printing works.
This is a big task when you realise that there are more than 12 billion banknotes and 70 billion coins in circulation in the EU at the moment.
7.7% in terms of value compared with the levels at the end of 2006 11.3 billion banknotes with a value of €628.2 billion. .
By 1 January 2002, an initial supply of 14.89 billion banknotes, including logistical stocks, had been printed for the 12 countries.
the production of€ banknotes started in July 1999 and about 14 billion banknotes will be printed by the end of 2001.
On the basis of current estimates, a total of more than 12 billion banknotes will be required for the EU Member States which will participate in the euro area from the start.
12.7% in terms of value compared with the levels at the end of 2007 12.1 billion banknotes with a value of Euros 676.6 billion. .
By 1 January 2002, an initial supply of 14.9 billion banknotes- enough to cover 15,000 football pitches- had been printed for the then 12 euro area countries.
BANKNOTE HANDLING BY THE EUROSYSTEM In 2008 the euro area NCBs issued 34.1 billion banknotes, while 33.2 billion banknotes were returned to them.
The initial production volume was fixed in 2001 at 14.9 billion banknotes( representing a value of more than Euros 633 billion), of which nine to ten billion were to be the launch stocks, replacing the national banknotes in circulation, and around five billion banknotes would make up the logistical stocks.
Towards the end of the production run for the launch of the euro, the total production capacity needed was one billion banknotes per month, which meant 33 million per day,
Production of the euro banknotes printed for the 11 participating countries: 9 billion banknotes to replace national banknotes and 4 billion banknotes as logistical stocks see Table 10.
This figure is very small considering that there are over 15 billion genuine banknotes in circulation at any one time.
All in all, more than 6 billion euro banknotes were distributed by the central banks of the euro area prior to« Euros- day».
Around 14 billion euro banknotes were produced, worth EUR 633 billion, and 52 billion euro
given that there are around 8 billion genuine banknotes in circulation, the public is encouraged to remain vigilant.
All in all, the euro area NCBs provided 6.4 billion euro banknotes with a face value of some Euros 133 billion to credit institutions located both inside and outside the euro area.
i.e. 6.4 billion euro banknotes worth some EUR 133 billion, had been frontloaded.