Germany, Australia, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, other EU countries and the United States have less than one wealthy country [percent] Of the eight billion dollars on Earth, social change is being forced to achieve net zero emissions in the small world within the planet. [emphasis, links added]
Wealthier countries are pledging billions of dollars in subsidies to support winners selected by wealthy countries to achieve net zero emissions, i.e., when weather conditions are unfavorable to wind and solar power generation, electricity can be stored.
It is immoral for wealthy countries to get rid of crude oil, coal and natural gas without replacement In developed and developing economies, extreme shortages of products made from fossil fuels will lead to tragic losses in billions of lives, malnutrition and weather-related events.
For the rich, more than 2 billion people in the world have to collect firewood or animal feces to cook, and nearly 800 million live without electricity.
They form the bottom of the world's population pyramid, and 80% of the 8 billion people on the planet, at a price of less than $10 a day. These billions of people cannot subsidize from energy poverty.
Billions of poor people in the world also live in countries where there are few labor laws or environmental laws to protect their landscapes and health.
The future prosperity of these billions of people in developing countries depends on their economic progress and can take advantage of any fundamental elements of a prosperous economy, i.e. They may be able to use any energy source, including fossil fuels, for electricity, and enjoy the strategic uses of the foundation of all modern infrastructureFor example:
- transportation
- Water filtration
- health
- Hospital
- Medical equipment
- Electrical appliances
- Electronics
- telecommunications
- Communication system
- Heating and cooling
Although billions of people in many parts of the world, including India, China, Egypt and Africa, Asia and America, must burn cow dung, A few in wealthy countries believe they can control climate change through subsidies on a 4 billion-year-old planet.
(1) Only wealthy economies have “green” movements and pursue them through authorization and expensive subsidies.
(2) The earth's resources are limited! Our planet has limited natural resources such as fossil fuels, especially critical minerals (in many new energy systems), such as lithium, cobalt, manganese and various rare earth elements (REE). [These minerals are essential for many new energy systems and are being extracted at unsustainable rates, primarily from poorer developing countries. The extraction processes are often unsophisticated and lead to dire working conditions, lack of labor and health protections, and significant environmental impact.]
With technological advances in wealthy countries, we may find “more” in the coming decades. Nevertheless, at the current extraction speed, the Earth may not be able to provide these resources for a long time, and in many cases, not even for a century.
Rich countries refuse to pay more attention to the limitations of the Earth's natural resources currently being extracted to enjoy the rich, because they do not know that our 4 billion-year-old planet will continue here, with or without humanity.
(3) Developing countries are currently the main source of “green” materials for wealthy countries. Current “green motion” technology requires a lot of REE and constantly scanning metal to make electric vehicle batteries, build wind turbines and solar panels, and build grid storage systems.
These materials are not readily available in several wealthier countries and are mainly exploited in developing countries.
Green energy authorizations and subsidies are leveraging people and landscapes around the world and providing economic encouragement to China and Africa to continue to treat vulnerable groups severelymainly yellow, brown and black skin, and economically incentivize the environment to support EVs, subsidized wind turbines and solar panels in backyards in wealthier countries.
(4) So-called renewable energy has proven to be very expensive electricity. The few countries that are able to provide substantial subsidies to transition to expensive, intermittent generation are Germany, Australia, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, other EU countries and the United States.
These countries are less than one-eighth of the world's population, but they know nothing about the billions of dollars in India, China, Egypt, Africa, Asia and Latin America, and they generate electricity for less than $10 a day.
Wealthier countries avoid discussion and explain how their “green movement” will help people living in poverty, developing countries join the industrialized society they enjoy.
(5) Supply chains that support zero-emission mandates and subsidies must be ethical and ethical. Billions of dollars have been spent to support the world's elite mission.
Meanwhile, they refuse to discuss ensuring sustainable supply chains, promoting responsible procurement practices, labor and environmental laws and regulations, and ensuring a fair, fair green and digital transition for all.
(6) Before wealthier countries accuse big oil of not having zero emissions society, they need to ask themselves:
“How can we continue to increase our demand for the products and fuels we produce in the wealthier countries, which makes our lives more comfortable?”
Without replacing these fuels and petrochemical derivatives, the gradual phase-out of oil will undoubtedly gradually eliminate the most important industries in modern society.including the medical industry, military, transportation, communications and electricity industries, and many other industries. The world will face the return of the cute lifestyle that exists in the 19th century.
Wealthier countries need to participate in dialogue to empower and subsidize how to provide products, fuel and electricity for $8 billion on this planetnot only for a few people living in wealthier countries, have the ability to subsidize intermittent wind and solar power generation, as well as the cost of the storage, grid upgrades and backup sources required for hasty energy transitions to “green” energy worlds .
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