Social: The rich live umpteen times as harmful to the climate as normal citizens

social
The rich live umpteen times as harmful to the climate as normal citizens

Who is responsible for the emissions? In Germany, the gap between rich and poor is wide. photo
© Thomas Warnack/dpa/symbol image
According to a “taz” data analysis, the poorest people in Germany emitted just over three tons of CO2 per year in 2019. For the richest 1 percent, it was almost 35 times as much.
The richest people in Germany emit umpteen times as much climate-damaging greenhouse gases as the average, according to a “taz” data analysis. While the poorest emitted just over three tons of CO2 per year in 2019, the richest one percent emitted around 105 tons – almost 35 times as much, as the newspaper on Saturday citing data from the World Inequality Labs, a think tank led by economist Thomas Piketty reported.
Dividing the wealthiest into even smaller groups increases this inequality further: Thus, according to “taz“The emissions of the richest 0.001 percent in Germany, about 800 people, are estimated at 11,700 tons per year – a thousand times the German average.
According to the newspaper, emissions in Germany fell by around 34 percent between 1991 and 2019, which was mainly due to the poorer two-thirds of the population. The richer third, on the other hand, saved below average.
Climate activists block private jet area in Eindhoven
Climate activists have also been denouncing the imbalance for a long time. On Saturday, several hundred climate protection demonstrators blocked the private jet area of the airport in the Dutch city of Eindhoven.
The development organization Oxfam had also denounced the rich around the world as climate polluters in November. The emissions that billionaires caused through their own consumption with private jets, super yachts and luxury villas amount to a thousand times the global per capita emissions. “If you also look at the emissions that are partly caused by their investments, their greenhouse gas emissions are many times higher.” But the responsibility of the super-rich for the climate crisis is hardly taken into account in politics.