At present, the one billion people living in developed (OECD) countries consume around half of the 470 EJ current annual global primary energy use (IEA, 2006b), whereas the one billion
poorest people in developing countries consume only around 4 %, mainly in the form of traditional biomass used inefficiently for cooking and heating.
[2] The new data raises doubt on how serious EU Member States are in their attempts to avoid catastrophic climate change, the impacts of which are increasingly felt across the globe already today, mostly by
poor people in developing countries who had no role in creating the problem.
He will talk about how cryptocurrencies can help
the poorest people in developing countries by giving them access to the global financial system.
First, climate change creates duties because those most responsible for causing this problem are the richer developed countries, yet those who are most vulnerable to the problem's harshest impacts are some of the world's
poorest people in developing countries.
In addition, these consequences would likely be felt disproportionately by
poor people in developing countries, especially those near the equator.
«
Poor people in developing countries are likely to be most vulnerable.
Although these people are richer than the global average, they include
the poorest people in the developed countries.
«unnecessarily increasing the cost of energy so that it is out of reach of poor and underdeveloped countries (not to mention,
poor people in developed countries).
He will talk about how cryptocurrencies can help
the poorest people in developing countries by giving them access to the global financial system.