elektra
Diamond Member
$300 Trillion to fight climate change. I kid you not. What can anyone say about that number other than Green, Renewables, Sustainable, power is obviously ridiculous to even consider, given the cost!
It is all greed. Greedy bankers, investors, Wall Street. Politicians, Dictators, the United Nations, the IMF, The World Bank. The Rockefeller Brothers fund, Black Rock investments. All have their hands reaching into our pockets to make themselves the first Trillionaires.
Pure Greed
On top of that, I just found the answer to a question I have repeatedly asked that nobody can answer. How much are we spending today. The answer is $6 trillion a year! The wish to increase that to $9 trillion. Which by the time the government is done, it most likely will inflate to $20 trillion a year.
Time to go nuclear
www.mckinsey.com
It is all greed. Greedy bankers, investors, Wall Street. Politicians, Dictators, the United Nations, the IMF, The World Bank. The Rockefeller Brothers fund, Black Rock investments. All have their hands reaching into our pockets to make themselves the first Trillionaires.
Pure Greed
On top of that, I just found the answer to a question I have repeatedly asked that nobody can answer. How much are we spending today. The answer is $6 trillion a year! The wish to increase that to $9 trillion. Which by the time the government is done, it most likely will inflate to $20 trillion a year.
Time to go nuclear

What will a green global economy cost? Our experts on the numbers—and what’s at stake.
Three authors of our latest research on the net-zero transition talk about the potential risks and opportunities that lie ahead in a more sustainable world.
This is where the money is being spent, this is a solar panel manufacturing plant.What changes should leaders expect in a full-scale net-zero transition?
Mekala: First, a net-zero transition will be universal, affecting every country and sector.
It will be significant. We model a particular net-zero scenario from the Network for Greening the Financial System, a consortium of central banks. In this scenario, $9.2 trillion will need to be spent per year over the next 30 years on physical assets, such as renewable power and infrastructure for electric vehicles. That’s a $3.5 trillion increase from what we’re spending today.