Life without oil ? Not as easy as you might think

October 18, 2024 Global Warming

It is a major threat to humanity to deprive developing countries of fossil products and fuels.

Veronica Baker


Life without oil ? Not as easy as you might think

The plight of nearly half the world – more than three billion people – who live on less than $2.50 a day, and the billions of people without access to electricity in places like Africa, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, and Malaysia, is further complicated by the hypocritical “green” agendas of leaders of the richest industrialized nations, who have historically benefited from the more than 6,000 products derived from fossil fuels since the beginning of the industrial age.

The so-called rich countries that now want to meet their net-zero carbon emission targets want to abandon the use of fossil fuels and the products and fuels that have made them economically advanced nations.


Life without oil ?


Poor countries, on the other hand, have an extreme need for these “products” in order to emerge from their underdeveloped state and transform themselves into thriving economies, not only in terms of national GDP growth, but especially for their socio-economic improvement.

In fact, the future prosperity of these populations, as well as about 80 percent of humanity, depends on their economic growth, which can only be achieved through access to the use of the fundamental elements of any thriving economy, namely the intelligent use of fossil fuels for the production of products and fuels that underpin all infrastructure, such as :

Transportation
Water filtration
Sanitation
Medical hospitals
Medical equipment
Home appliances
Consumer electronics
Telecommunications
Communication systems
Heating and ventilation

Western countries that want to eliminate crude oil, coal and natural gas from the world, without thinking of any substitutes for them, are following the highly immoral program of the so-called 2030 Agenda, which will lead to billions of deaths from disease, malnutrition, and death in both developed and underdeveloped economies precisely because of the scarcity of fossil fuels.

Just think of the change in nitrogen fertilizers and pesticides, which alone will result in about half of the world’s population not having enough food to eat.

Life without oil is not as easy as one might think.
Depriving developing countries of fossil products and fuels is, in fact, a major threat to humanity.