The Petrodollar Dilemma:
How Climate Action Threatens the U.S. Dollar—and Why We Need a New Strategy
By Steven W. Pearce
Founder, Pearce Sustainability Consulting Group
Harvard | ESG Consultant | Global Development Leader
Introduction: A Dangerous Paradox
For over half a century, the global economy hasn’t just run on oil as an energy source, it has run on oil as a currency anchor. Most Americans are unaware that since the U.S. abandoned the gold standard in the early 1970s, the dollar’s global dominance has relied on something far more combustible: the petrodollar system.
Under this arrangement, born in the wake of the 1973 oil crisis, oil-exporting countries, beginning with Saudi Arabia, agreed to price all petroleum exports exclusively in U.S. dollars. In return, the U.S. provided military protection and geopolitical backing. This deal made the dollar the de facto currency of global energy markets and forced countries around the world to hold large reserves of USD to buy oil, reinforcing the dollar’s role as the world’s primary reserve currency.
This sustained demand has underwritten U.S. economic hegemony, enabled cheap borrowing, and allowed America to run persistent trade deficits without consequence. The petrodollar became a silent pillar of American power, rarely discussed, but absolutely central.
And now, we face a paradox with existential implications.
If we succeed in transitioning away from fossil fuels, through electrification, green hydrogen, EVs, and renewables, we also erode the foundation of the petrodollar system. That means declining global demand for the U.S. dollar. In effect, climate victory could weaken the currency that props up the American-led world order.
On the other hand, delaying the green transition to protect dollar supremacy is a Faustian bargain that risks catastrophic planetary breakdown.
Act too aggressively, and we threaten the dollar. Fail to act, and we threaten the planet.
This is the trap no one wants to name. Politicians dodge it. Investors sidestep it. Diplomats whisper about it, but only behind closed doors.
As an ESG consultant with deep experience across sustainability strategy, national security, and international development, I believe this is the most important, and least acknowledged, challenge of our era. And unless we confront it with clarity, courage, and creativity, we may stumble into a future where we lose both the currency and the climate.
Section 1: The Birth of the Petrodollar System
How a desperate pivot in 1971 reshaped global finance, war, and the climate crisis
In 1971, facing mounting inflation, a growing trade deficit, and dwindling U.S. gold reserves, President Richard Nixon made a move that would reverberate through every corner of global economics for decades to come: he severed the U.S. dollar from the gold standard.
Until then, under the Bretton Woods system, the U.S. dollar had been backed by gold, creating a stable global monetary architecture. But by the early 1970s, America could no longer maintain the illusion. Foreign governments, especially France under President Charles de Gaulle,had begun demanding gold in exchange for their swelling reserves of U.S. dollars. Nixon’s decision, dubbed the “Nixon Shock,” collapsed the global gold peg overnight. The dollar became a pure fiat currency—floating freely, untethered from any physical commodity.
This sudden shift posed a catastrophic risk to U.S. economic dominance. Without the stabilizing anchor of gold, why would nations continue holding and using the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency? The answer came in the form of a strategic oil deal that changed everything.
The 1974 Saudi Pact: Oil Becomes the Dollar’s New Backing
In 1974, the United States struck a historic deal with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: in exchange for U.S. military protection, weapons, and preferential trade agreements, Saudi Arabia would price all of its oil exports exclusively in U.S. dollars.
Other OPEC members soon followed. The implications were profound.
From that point forward, every country in the world that wanted to buy oil, regardless of its relationship to the U.S., first had to acquire U.S. dollars. This meant constant global demand for the dollar, effectively recreating the dollar’s supremacy without needing gold. In geopolitical terms, the U.S. had created the “petrodollar system”, a de facto oil-backed currency system without formally calling it one.
The result?
The U.S. could print money with fewer consequences for inflation than other nations.
It gained enormous leverage over the global financial system via the SWIFT network, dollar-denominated debt, and dollar reserves.
The U.S. military and foreign policy architecture aligned itself with the protection of oil flows and the regimes that sustained the petrodollar model.
Global economic dependence on oil, and thus on the dollar, was baked into the architecture of modern capitalism.
This move not only salvaged U.S. economic hegemony post-Bretton Woods, it solidified it.
The Exorbitant Privilege
French economists had a term for what came next: “le privilège exorbitant.” The U.S. could export inflation, borrow at will, and finance a sprawling military-industrial complex because the rest of the world had to hold dollars to fuel their economies.
It was elegant. Ruthless. Effective.
But it came with a long-term cost that no one fully accounted for at the time: it cemented oil as the cornerstone of the global economy, making climate change not just an ecological or scientific issue, but a currency issue, a national security issue, and perhaps the most strategically difficult economic challenge of the modern age.
Section 2: Oil, Military Power, and the Currency Feedback Loop
How the U.S. military became the silent guarantor of the dollar’s supremacy through oil
The petrodollar system, as established in the 1970s, was never just about economics. It was always about power. And in the case of the United States, that power is enforced through military dominance, especially in the oil-rich regions that uphold the system’s foundations.
The Gulf as a Strategic Chessboard
Since the 1974 oil-for-dollars agreement with Saudi Arabia, the Persian Gulf has functioned as a de facto security zone for U.S. monetary policy. The sprawling U.S. military footprint, comprising bases in Qatar (Al Udeid), Kuwait, Bahrain (home to the Fifth Fleet), and UAE, was not simply designed to deter regional conflict or terrorism. It also serves as a stabilization mechanism for the global oil market, ensuring that major disruptions do not endanger dollar-denominated petroleum flows.
When nations like Iraq, Iran, or Libya have sought to challenge this dynamic, conflict has often followed.
Iraq and the Dollar Threat
In the early 2000s, Saddam Hussein announced plans to sell Iraqi oil in euros, not dollars. While this was framed in media narratives as a political maneuver or a diplomatic jab, it represented an existential threat to the petrodollar system. If Iraq succeeded, and if others followed, it could trigger a global de-dollarization cascade in oil trade, undermining the dollar’s reserve status and weakening U.S. control over global liquidity.
Months later, the U.S. invaded Iraq.
Was the war about weapons of mass destruction? Perhaps partly. But to geopolitical realists and many within the intelligence community, the currency shift was the red line. After the U.S. toppled Saddam, oil sales were quickly reverted back to dollars. The message was unmistakable.
Libya and the African Gold Dinar
Years later, Muammar Gaddafi began pushing for a pan-African gold-backed currency to replace the CFA franc and challenge Western monetary control over Africa. He also explored selling Libyan oil for a basket of currencies or gold.
Within months, NATO forces, led by France and the U.S., intervened. Gaddafi was assassinated. His gold reserves vanished. The initiative died with him.
Again, the overt narrative was humanitarian intervention. The covert story was about currency sovereignty and resource control.
Iran and Sanctions as Monetary Warfare
Iran, too, has attempted to break from the petrodollar, trading oil in yuan, euros, and even barter deals with India. But rather than open warfare, the U.S. and its allies have deployed financial weapons: SWIFT cutoffs, sanctions, and asset freezes. In today’s world, monetary instruments can cripple economies as effectively as bombs.
By controlling the infrastructure of global finance, banks, clearinghouses, ratings agencies, and SWIFT, the U.S. enforces the dollar’s supremacy without always needing boots on the ground.
The Feedback Loop: Oil → Dollar → Military → Oil
Here’s the loop in plain terms:
Oil is priced in dollars, so every country needs dollars to function.
The dollar is strong because of this global oil demand.
The U.S. military protects oil flows, ensuring markets remain dollar-denominated.
This protection ensures the dollar remains supreme, allowing the U.S. to fund its military through deficit spending.
It’s circular. It’s self-reinforcing. And it’s deeply fragile.
Because at the center of it all is fossil fuel dependency, and the longer we delay transitioning to renewables, the more the system cannibalizes itself. The petrodollar’s strength in the short term becomes a strategic liability in the long term, especially as climate change intensifies and global decarbonization accelerates.
Section 3: The Rise of ESG and Green Energy—A Real Threat to the Dollar?
The global push for sustainability, especially under the banners of ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance), Net Zero, and green energy, is rapidly reshaping global energy systems. But beneath the surface of climate diplomacy and sustainability investments lies a profound and under-discussed tension: the threat these transitions pose to the U.S. dollar’s dominance.
1. The Push for Net Zero and the Unraveling of Oil Dependency
Major economies, from the EU to China, have committed to decarbonization pathways that prioritize:
Electrification of transport (EVs)
Renewable energy (solar, wind, hydro)
Emerging technologies (green hydrogen, grid storage, nuclear fusion)
ESG-aligned investment frameworks
This shift directly reduces the world’s dependency on oil, undermining the very foundation of the petrodollar system, where global energy trade (primarily oil) is denominated in U.S. dollars.
The global energy transition, in this light, is not just an environmental imperative, it is a geopolitical disruptor. As demand for oil plateaus and potentially falls, the artificial, built-in demand for U.S. dollars also begins to erode.
2. The Geoeconomic Challenge: Oil for Yuan, Gold, and Barter
In recent years, several nations, particularly those seeking to challenge U.S. global hegemony—have begun executing energy trades outside of the U.S. dollar:
China has introduced the petroyuan, encouraging its use in oil contracts with Russia, Iran, and even Saudi Arabia.
Russia and Iran have turned to ruble and rial-based barter systems or gold settlements amid Western sanctions.
Saudi Arabia, the original partner in the 1974 petrodollar accord, has flirted with the idea of accepting Chinese yuan for oil sales.
These are not yet dominant trends, but they are symbolic of a fracturing consensus around the dollar as the sole global energy currency. The broader the acceptance of alternative trade currencies, the greater the vulnerability of the dollar’s privileged position.
3. The Climate Backlash as a Strategic Defense of Dollar Supremacy
This section explores a theory I’ve developed over years of observing the intersection between geopolitics, climate policy, and monetary systems:
While the political resistance to climate science and green energy in parts of the United States, especially among GOP lawmakers, is often portrayed as ideological, it may in fact serve a deeper strategic function. It can be interpreted as a short-term national security measure aimed at preserving U.S. dollar dominance.
If global oil demand declines in favor of renewable energy, the foundational link between oil and the U.S. dollar, the petrodollar system, begins to weaken. That threatens America’s ability to export its currency, sustain deficits, and maintain the fiscal and military reach that dollar supremacy enables.
Thus, from this vantage point, climate denialism, anti-ESG campaigns, and the dismantling of institutions like USAID or NOAA may represent more than just political posturing, they may be tactical efforts to delay the erosion of the petrodollar system. These maneuvers buy time as the U.S. faces the monumental task of redefining its global economic leverage in a world no longer tethered to fossil fuels.
In this light, the backlash against green energy is not merely about ideology, it is about geopolitical survival.
Section 4: Why This is a National Security Issue
The petrodollar has long served as the hidden pillar of U.S. economic dominance. But the accelerating shift toward a green, post-oil economy presents an existential threat, not just to traditional energy sectors, but to the very architecture of American power. This makes the transition not only an economic concern, but a national security imperative.
If the U.S. dollar (USD) were to lose its global reserve status, the consequences would be profound:
• Loss of Global Trade Leverage
The USD underpins over 80% of global trade settlements. If countries begin transacting in alternative currencies like the Chinese yuan, euro, or gold-backed mechanisms, the United States loses its ability to shape trade dynamics, apply sanctions effectively, or influence the terms of global commerce.
• Loss of Cheap Credit
As long as the dollar remains the world’s reserve currency, the U.S. enjoys historically low borrowing costs, with global investors demanding Treasuries as a safe haven. If the dollar weakens or loses this privileged position, the cost of debt skyrockets. That would squeeze public spending on infrastructure, defense, social programs, and climate adaptation, just as these areas become more critical than ever.
• Loss of Global Influence
U.S. foreign aid, military assistance, and diplomatic tools have always rested on the ability to fund global engagement through dollar-based financial systems. Without reserve currency status, the U.S. loses soft power and the fiscal flexibility to respond quickly to global crises—be they humanitarian, environmental, or geopolitical.
Meanwhile, China is not only filling the void, it’s building a new global paradigm:
China’s Strategic Positioning
• Rare Earth Dominance: China controls 70-90% of global production and processing of rare earth elements essential for EVs, solar panels, and military technologies.
• Green Manufacturing Supremacy: Through state subsidies and long-term industrial planning, China leads in solar panel production, battery technology, and electric vehicles, cornerstones of the post-oil economy.
• Belt and Road 2.0 (BRI 2.0): What began as a physical infrastructure project has now morphed into a green financing strategy. China is exporting solar farms, battery storage, and smart grid technologies, financed in yuan, to dozens of countries, effectively creating an ESG-aligned, China-centric economic bloc.
This is not just an economic competition, it’s a fight for the future global order.
The irony is striking: As parts of the U.S. political establishment resist climate science and ESG integration, China is accelerating into green markets, building alliances, and using sustainability as a tool of soft power.
The longer the U.S. delays its transition or treats ESG as a partisan wedge issue, the more ground it loses, not just in clean energy, but in global leadership. From this perspective, preserving dollar supremacy in a decarbonizing world demands more than denial, it requires strategic reinvention.Bottom of Form
Section 5: What No One is Saying
“You can’t decarbonize the planet without destabilizing the petrodollar. But you can’t preserve the petrodollar without destroying the planet.”
This is the silent paradox at the core of our modern world order, an uncomfortable truth that few in Washington, Wall Street, or Davos dare to acknowledge publicly, even as it shapes the future of global finance, climate action, and geopolitical stability.
We are caught in a deadly feedback loop between environmental survival and financial hegemony, two imperatives increasingly in conflict.
The Petrodollar is Not Just Economic, It’s the Architecture of Power
Since the 1970s, the global economy has functioned on a foundation few question: oil priced in U.S. dollars. This arrangement, formalized after the collapse of the Bretton Woods gold standard, allowed the U.S. to achieve something no empire in history has ever pulled off at scale:
Export inflation
Run massive deficits without currency collapse
Maintain dollar dominance without backing it with gold or real assets
The result was the so-called “exorbitant privilege” of the U.S. dollar. Central banks worldwide began stockpiling dollars to buy energy, and that demand created a self-sustaining loop: oil exports → dollar demand → U.S. borrowing → global liquidity → dollar supremacy.
But the world is changing, and fast.
Climate Technologies Are Quietly Dismantling the System
Each megawatt of solar capacity, every electric vehicle, and every green hydrogen electrolyzer reduces long-term global oil demand. As the world electrifies and decarbonizes, it inadvertently does something else: challenges the systemic demand for the dollar itself.
In other words, saving the planet means weakening the very monetary architecture that underpins the current U.S. global position. This is not ideological, it’s mechanical. The global energy transition erodes the very conditions that gave rise to the petrodollar.
And here lies the quiet war. Not between left and right. Not even between nations. But between paradigms:
The Two Unspoken Extremes
Paradigm One: The Petrodollar Defense Camp
Prolongs fossil fuel subsidies under the guise of “energy independence.”
Defunds or disables climate science institutions (e.g., USAID, NOAA).
Portrays sustainability efforts and ESG as “woke capitalism” or “anti-American.”
Weaponizes disinformation to maintain public skepticism about climate action.
This camp is not just resisting change, it is, in effect, defending the petrodollar by any means necessary. But this strategy ultimately leads to climate catastrophe, rising disaster costs, global instability, and eventual resource wars.
Paradigm Two: The Decarbonization-at-All-Costs Camp
Calls for an abrupt fossil fuel phase-out without a financial or geopolitical transition plan.
Ignores the impact of undermining the dollar as the global reserve.
Assumes that markets, voluntary ESG frameworks, and consumer sentiment alone will override fifty years of systemic petrodollar inertia.
Risks triggering a financial shockwave as the underlying demand for dollars diminishes faster than replacement systems can be established.
This camp underestimates how deeply oil and the dollar are entwined, and how chaotic a “cold decoupling” could be if left unmanaged.
What’s Needed: A Third Path
Neither paradigm is viable. One leads to climate collapse. The other leads to economic collapse.
What we need is an integrated strategic transition, a third path that recognizes and resolves the entanglement between energy, currency, and power. This means:
1. Redefining What Backs the Dollar
Rather than tethering the dollar to oil, we need to gradually anchor it to a diverse basket of strategic climate assets:
Rare earths, lithium, copper
Blockchain-verified carbon credits
Green hydrogen supply chain metrics
Climate-resilient digital infrastructure
This could evolve into a climate-adjusted SDR-style mechanism for global reserves, a “green currency standard.”
⚙️ 2. Leveraging U.S. Industrial and AI Strength
The U.S. must own the clean energy future, not just through domestic policy, but by setting global benchmarks in:
ESG standards enforcement
Predictive climate modeling (powered by AI)
Sustainable supply chain dominance
Green finance and digital climate risk insurance
Dollar demand in the 21st century must come not from oil, but from America’s credibility and capability in building the systems that safeguard the planet.
3. Leading a New Global Compact
We need a “Green Bretton Woods”, a convening of global powers that integrates:
Climate goals with monetary policy
ESG metrics into international trade agreements
Decarbonization pathways with sovereign debt frameworks
This approach would align the future of the dollar with the future of the Earth, not against it.
4. Reframing Sustainability as National Security
Climate change is already a threat multiplier. Water stress, food insecurity, and climate-driven migration will destabilize regions faster than traditional warfare.
By embedding ESG and climate metrics into military logistics, defense planning, and diplomatic strategies, we ensure that the U.S. dollar is backed not by scarcity and extraction, but by resilience and security.
It’s Time for Brave Leadership
We are living through the last days of the petrodollar era. But what replaces it, and how that transition is managed, will determine whether we enter a century of collaboration and climate stability, or one of conflict, collapse, and contested currencies.
This is not a fringe theory. It is geopolitical inevitability.
We need leaders in finance, defense, diplomacy, and sustainability who can:
See the full picture.
Tell the hard truths.
Forge a future where climate action and economic strength are not enemies—but allies.
This is the inflection point. And history is watching.
Section 6: A Strategic Roadmap Forward
To escape the false binary of “climate versus currency,” the United States, and the broader global system, must confront a reality that is both uncomfortable and urgent: the foundations of international power must be redesigned. We are no longer in an era where minor reforms or carbon offsets will suffice. This is not a moment for incrementalism. It is a historic inflection point, an opportunity to reshape the architecture of global finance, energy, and security.
Here’s what must happen:
1. Redefine the Dollar’s Anchor
The U.S. dollar has long drawn its strength from oil—directly through petrodollar arrangements and indirectly via global energy trade. But in a decarbonizing world, that foundation is eroding. A post-petrodollar future must be backed by the commodities and credibility of the clean economy.
What could replace oil as the new reserve anchor?
Strategic minerals like lithium, cobalt, and rare earth elements, the building blocks of clean tech.
Tokenized carbon markets, blockchain-based systems verifying emissions reduction and climate impact.
Climate-adjusted digital assets that integrate ESG performance, supply chain transparency, and environmental resilience.
This is not a speculative future, it is already happening. China is piloting carbon exchanges. The EU is linking green taxonomy to financial flows. The U.S. must act decisively to ensure that climate-backed value systems revolve around the dollar, not around the yuan, euro, or crypto alternatives.
The next-generation dollar must be more than a fiat instrument, it must become a currency backed by trust, transparency, and tangible sustainability performance.
2. Own the Clean Future
Control of tomorrow’s industrial base is the new currency of global power.
The United States must assert a decisive lead across the key technologies that define the net-zero economy. This is not just about green jobs or GDP growth, this is about strategic autonomy and economic security. The question is not if these technologies will dominate the next century, but who will control them.
Priority industries include:
EV manufacturing and advanced battery storage (including solid-state and sodium-ion)
Rare earth extraction, refining, and permanent magnet supply chains
Green hydrogen production and industrial-scale electrolyzers
Low-carbon steel, cement, and modular construction systems
Recyclable and circular tech for wind, solar, and battery decommissioning
This industrial renaissance must be public-private, military-civilian, and domestic-global. If the U.S. builds the clean technologies of the future, the world will continue to seek American capital, platforms, and crucially the dollar to transact within those systems.
3. Launch a “Green Bretton Woods”
In 1944, the Bretton Woods agreement set the stage for 80 years of dollar supremacy by anchoring the post-war economy around a stable reserve system.
Now, we must convene Bretton Woods 2.0, a global compact built for the climate-constrained, digitally interconnected 21st century. This summit must bring together:
Central banks, to align on climate-aligned monetary policies and stress-testing protocols.
Multilateral lenders (IMF, World Bank, regional development banks), to create green liquidity mechanisms that underwrite clean infrastructure.
Sovereign wealth funds and institutional investors, to shift trillions toward ESG-aligned portfolios.
Blockchain governance experts, to design transparent, auditable, digital markets for carbon and clean commodities.
This new compact should define:
A climate-adjusted global monetary framework
Shared rules for green finance, transparency, and digital asset verification
Mechanisms for stabilizing currencies in climate-stressed or resource-scarce nations
If the U.S. takes the lead, the dollar can remain the preferred reserve, not because it’s backed by oil, but because it’s the currency of stability, sustainability, and trust in an age of climate disruption.
4. Build the ESG–Military Nexus
Climate security is national security.
Rising temperatures, drought, sea level rise, and resource scarcity are already amplifying migration, food insecurity, and civil conflict. From the Sahel to Southeast Asia, climate breakdown is not a future threat, it is a present threat multiplier destabilizing fragile states and supply chains.
It is no longer enough to treat ESG and defense strategy as separate silos. The Department of Defense, intelligence agencies, and homeland security frameworks must embed climate foresight and ESG metrics at the core of their risk analysis.
This means:
Climate resilience in military logistics, from energy storage at forward bases to heat-adapted infrastructure.
Geospatial ESG mapping of global flashpoints, integrating environmental degradation, governance risk, and migration flows.
Redefining currency strength in terms of its ability to enable humanitarian response, peacekeeping, and infrastructure resilience.
In short: a dollar tied to climate security is more future-proof than a dollar tied to volatile fossil fuel markets. This is not idealism—it is strategic realism.
🛡️ This Is the Choice Before Us
We can let the petrodollar decay slowly, dragging U.S. influence and global stability down with it.
Or we can proactively shape a future where the dollar becomes the currency of climate leadership, clean innovation, and global resilience.
This is not the work of one administration. It is the next grand project of American statecraft.
The time to begin is now.
Conclusion: A Call to Conscious Power
America cannot afford to sleepwalk into irrelevance, nor can it boil the planet in a desperate attempt to remain number one.
The petrodollar dilemma is real, but it is not unsolvable. We face a stark choice between clinging to a 20th-century energy-currency paradigm or boldly shaping a 21st-century model of influence rooted in sustainability, technology, and trust.
This is not about sacrificing economic strength for ecological survival. It’s about redefining what makes a currency and a country truly powerful.
Oil is finite. Influence is not.
The strength of the dollar should not come from what we extract from the Earth, but from what we contribute to the world: ideas, innovation, resilience, and moral leadership.
Let us build a dollar backed not by barrels, but by the boundless power of human ingenuity, scientific excellence, and a livable planet.
This is the path to enduring prosperity, not just for America, but for all of humanity.
The future of global power won’t be measured in tanks or tonnage—but in trust.
Let’s lead it.
About Steven W. Pearce
Steven W. Pearce is a globally recognized expert in sustainability, ESG strategy, and international development. With more than 13 years of experience advising governments, corporations, and multilateral institutions, he is the Founder and CEO of Pearce Sustainability Consulting Group (PSCG), a multi-award-winning firm honored as the Best Sustainability Consulting Firm in California and Best SDG Impact Measurement & ESG Reporting Company in America.
Steven holds an MBA in Sustainability Management, a Master of Project Management, and a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology, Anthropology, and Political Science. He is currently enrolled in Harvard University's Global Development Practice program and has completed specialized executive training through Duke University, the Wharton School, and the United Nations.
Steven has worked extensively across North America, Africa, and the Middle East, including partnerships with USAID, the Department of Defense, the UN, and various Fortune 500 companies. He has delivered ESG services to over 2,200 hospitals, contributed to national development strategies, and led high-level climate resilience projects aligned with the SDGs.
He is the author of multiple books including:
From Warming to Warfare: Climate Change and the Road to World War III
Make Green by Going Green: The Executive’s Guide to Profitability Through Sustainability
Climate Wars: How Resource Scarcity and Climate Risk Are Reshaping Global Conflict
The forthcoming children's sustainability series Shasta the Sustainable Squirrel
A thought leader on the intersection of climate, economics, and security, Steven is a frequent speaker at international forums and a contributor to platforms like The Muslim Vibe, The Inscriber, and the Global Sustainability Futures Network. He is also the visionary architect behind the Predictive Sustainability Intelligence (PSI) platform, an emerging solution integrating AI, ESG metrics, and geospatial foresight.
Steven splits his time between California, Tunisia, and the UAE, using his global reach to build bridges between innovation, ethics, and impact. His work is grounded in one mission: simplifying sustainability and amplifying global resilience.
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