Australian greenies, mining companies, universities and big business to attend WEF conference on Monday
Big names and big companies will meet in Davos on Monday to discuss and develop policy for governments.
The meeting will take place from 16 January to 20 January. The four days will cover a wide spectrum of formats for interaction and learning, giving leaders the necessary tools to address the current complexity and build for the future. They will revolve around the following three archetypes:
- Dialogues to forge understanding and alignment and exchange insights
- Gatherings of communities of purpose to drive tangible action on key global issues
- Opportunities for foresight and discovery to scale society critical innovations
The meeting will feature addresses by key heads of state and government as well as various geo-economic and geopolitical deliberations such as the Country Strategy Dialogues, Diplomacy Dialogues and the Informal Gathering of World Economic Leaders (IGWEL) meetings. It will also gather the Forum’s foremost business communities, such as the International Business Council, the Community of Chairpersons and the Industry Governors.
Meeting Agenda
1.Addressing the Current Energy and Food Crises in the context of a New System for Energy, Climate and Nature
2.Addressing the Current High Inflation, Low Growth, High Debt Economy in the context of a New System for Investment, Trade and Infrastructure
3.Addressing the Current Industry Headwinds in the context of a New System for Harnessing Frontier Technologies for Private Sector Innovation and Resilience
4.Addressing the Current Social Vulnerabilities in the context of a New System for Work, Skills and Care
5.Addressing the Current Geopolitical Risks in the context of a New System for Dialogue and Cooperation in a Multipolar World
Australian delegates are:
(a)Peter Holmes-a-Court
Millionaire rabid Greenie, climate cultist, and co-ordinator of the Parliamentary Teals
(b)Professor Genevieve Bell
(c)Julie Bishop
Former Foreign Affairs Minister and solicitor
(d)Brian Schmidt
Vice-Chancellor ANU
(e)Caroline Cox
Vice-President BHP
(f)Mike Henry
CEO of BHP
(g)Timothy Aires
NSW Liberal Assistant Minister for Trade
(h)Andrew ‘Twiggy’Forset
Chairman Fortescue Metals, WA
(i)Jade Hameister
Teen environmental activist
(j)Julie Inman Grant
ESafety Commissioner
(k)Naomi Flutter
Wesfarmers
(l)Michael Schneider
Bunnings (Coles)
This indicates who is running the show – private enterprise mostly. No pollies needed.
But where are the bankster reps?