Billionaire Michael Bloomberg to personally fund $771 MILLION YEARLY US Commitment to Paris Climate Accord

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Marshall
TRUMP and MAGA GOP better watch out. They start opening up these avenues to GLOBAL POWER left in a vacuum of pulling US Govt Support for these things and the Billionaires will sweep in and BUY UP that GLOBAL INFLUENCE...and the US Govt will find itself sitting down 4th 5th 6th deep on the Influence Totem pole in Power and Influence....and you better hope it is the AMERICAN billionaires that step into these roles and buy up all this power and influence the US opening up to the rest of the world by pulling back.


For the second time Trump withdrew the US from the Paris Climate Agreement and removed all US Funding to be spent on it.

American Philanthropist Promises To Cover $771.23M Annually After US Exit From Climate Accords

Michael Bloomberg has stepped in and said he will personally fund the US participation and US role in the Paris Climate Agreement and will pay $771 Million PER YEAR to cover the missing US payments


Philanthropist Promises To Cover $771.23M Annually After US Exit From Climate Accords©YouTube - Neal Taparia
If you haven’t already heard, the U.S. dropped out of the Paris Climate Agreement (again), leaving a $771.23 million hole in global climate funding. But guess who just swooped in like a real-life Bruce Wayne? Michael Bloomberg—yes, the billionaire and former NYC mayor just promised to personally cover the U.S.’s missing climate payments.

Bloomberg has done this before. Back in 2017, when the U.S. first walked away from the Paris Agreement, he pledged $15 million to keep the country’s climate commitments afloat. Now he’s upping the ante big time, covering the entire $771 million annual contribution the U.S. was supposed to pay to support global climate action. If the government won’t step up, he’s making sure the world knows America’s not totally checked out.

So, what does $771 million a year actually do? Bloomberg’s money will keep the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) running. That means funding climate research, emission tracking, and global sustainability projects. Basically, this is the cash that helps the world stay accountable on carbon emissions and climate progress. And with the U.S. backing out, this funding was about to disappear overnight.

Here’s where it gets even more interesting. The U.S. government hasn’t even acknowledged the funding gap publicly. While politicians argue over budgets and policies, Bloomberg just handled it himself. The message? “We don’t need to wait for Congress to fight over it. Let’s just get it done.”

Think about this: a private citizen is now filling in for an entire nation’s climate obligations. When else have we seen something like this? This is more than charity, it’s international power dynamics. Bloomberg isn’t just helping the planet; he’s reshaping the way private wealth influences global policy.
 
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