“The emissions from a single billionaire space flight would exceed the lifetime emissions of someone in the poorest billion people on Earth. A tiny elite appear to have a free pass to pollute."
How large are inequalities in global carbon emissions – and what to do about it?
Income-based U.S. household carbon footprints (1990–2019) offer new insights on emissions inequality and climate finance
Greenhouse gas emissions by the United States - Wikipedia
Economics of climate change mitigation - Wikipedia
COP26: Emissions of rich put climate goals at risk - study
Millionaire spending incompatible with 1.5 °C ambitions - ScienceDirect
Carbon emissions of richest 1% set to be 30 times the 1.5°C limit by 2030 - Oxfam Pilipinas
Delivering the European Green Deal - European Commission
The World #InequalityReport 2022 presents the most up-to-date & complete data on inequality worldwide: 💵 global wealth🌍 ecological inequality💰 income inequality since 1820♀ gender inequality
Carbon emissions of richest 1% set to be 30 times the 1.5°C limit by 2030 - Oxfam Pilipinas
COP26: Emissions of rich put climate goals at risk - study
Rising carbon inequality and its driving factors from 2005 to 2015 - ScienceDirect