Bill Gates is an incredibly busy man, but he always makes time to read. He reads about 50 books per year, which breaks down to one per week and frequently updates his book reviews on his blog. In this post, we've compiled a total of 185 books that Bill Gates has read in the last decade.
Bill Gates at the UN climate action summit in September 2019. to remove 51bn tonnes of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere every year. Failing to do so would cost more than the 1.5 million
Fossil fuel: 500 to 10,000 watts per square meter. Nuclear: 500 to 1,000 watts per square meter. Solar: 5 to 20 watts per square meter (Gates says itâs theoretically possible for this to get as
Gates had a net worth of $116 Billion in 2020. It all started in 1987 when Forbes magazine listed Gates as the worldâs youngest self-made billionaire. In 2015 he was the richest man in America. He was named the richest person in Americaâs 50 largest cities in 2016.
Gatesâ remaining 1% stake in Microsoft as of June is worth more than $7 billion, while the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation maintains over $50 billion in assets that can be counted among the
His book encompasses wisdom from sources that range from less well-known climate scientists, such as Vaclav Smil and Ken Caldeira, to John D Cox, author of Weather For Dummies, which, says Gates
Gates carries a tote bag full of books âeverywhere he goes.â. Books are so critical to Gatesâs life, the tote bag plays a recurring role in the new Netflix series, Inside Billâs Brain. TheThese days, former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates reads a new book every week. The former Microsoft CEO has attested to reading 50 books a year, or roughly one book a week. Francois Rochon is one of those who can and has; his Rochon Global portfolio 1 (that serves as a model for clients at Giverny Capital) has delivered a 15.3%2 annual compound return for nearly three decades, outperforming the benchmark 3 by more than five percent per annum. By 2020âs year end, the Rochon Global portfolioâs cumulative return
There's a Great Reset podcast and even a 280-page book. But the plan is light on specific detail. But the plan is light on specific detail. Prof Schwab does speak about a "wealth tax" and ending
In most places, as people earn more money, they want to eat more meat. Brazilâs per-capita consumption has gone up fourfold since 1950. Chinaâs nearly doubled in the 1990s. Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea, and Japan have also seen big increases. More countries are sure to follow, and thatâs a good thing. dnSCmbr.