Countries: World, Iran (Islamic Republic of) Source: Oxfam La fortune des milliardaires a déjà bondi de près de 10 000 milliards de dollars alors que le monde traverse sa cinquième crise économique depuis 2020. Les pays du G7 ont réduit de 48 milliards de dollars leur aide aux pays les plus pauvres du monde entre 2024 et 2025, soit l’équivalent de ce que les milliardaires du G7 accumulaient sur cette période en seulement neuf jours. Oxfam appelle le « G6 » à cesser d’utiliser l’intransigeance des États-Unis comme prétexte à l’inaction, et demande de toute urgence l’instauration de taxes sur les superprofits et les grandes fortunes, la suspension de la dette, une augmentation de l’aide et de nouveaux droits de tirage spéciaux. Une nouvelle analyse d’Oxfam, publiée à la veille du sommet du G7 à Évian, en France, révèle que 41 milliardaires de l’énergie du G7 ont vu leur fortune augmenter de 23,5 milliards de dollars depuis le début de la guerre illicite menée par les États-Unis et Israël contre l’Iran. Cela équivaut à plus de 1 000 dollars dans le temps qu’il faut pour cligner des yeux. À l’échelle mondiale, les milliardaires ont engrangé 9 800 milliards de dollars depuis 2020. La flambée des prix de l’énergie et des denrées alimentaires a des conséquences dévastatrices pour les ménages du monde entier, en particulier dans les pays à faible revenu et à revenu intermédiaire déjà éprouvés par des années de turbulences économiques, de crises de la dette et de chocs climatiques. Dans le même temps, les bénéfices de six majors pétrolières devraient grimper en flèche de 80 % (68 milliards de dollars) par rapport aux prévisions d’avant-guerre. Leurs bénéfices cumulés devraient atteindre 152 milliards de dollars en 2026, soit l’équivalent de 416 millions de dollars par jour. Ces superprofits s’étendent à d’autres secteurs : trois des principales entreprises d'engrais au monde devraient voir leurs bénéfices bondir de 23 % (928 millions de dollars) par rapport aux estimations d

World: Les milliardaires de l’énergie du G7 empochent 300 millions de dollars par jour depuis le début de la guerre illicite menée par les États-Unis et Israël contre l’Iran
AI Summary & Analysis
Got it, let's tackle this. First, What happened? Need to be precise, no adjectives. Let's see: Oxfam's analysis published ahead of the G7 Évian summit found that 41 G7 energy billionaires' collective wealth rose by $23.5 billion since the start of the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran, while G7 official development assistance to low-income countries fell by $48 billion between 2024 and 2025, and global billionaire wealth has grown by nearly $10 trillion since 2020 alongside projected 80% year-over-year profit increases for six major oil firms in 2026. Wait no, make it one sentence, factual, no extra. Wait, no, first what happened: Oxfam's pre-G7 Évian summit analysis found that 41 G7 energy billionaires' combined wealth increased by $23.5 billion since the start of the U.S. and Israeli military action against Iran, G7 aid to the world's poorest countries dropped by $48 billion between 2024 and 2025, global billionaire wealth has risen by nearly $10 trillion since 2020, and six major oil companies are projected to see 80% profit growth in 2026 compared to pre-conflict forecasts. Wait no, make it accurate, no speculation. Wait the source is Oxfam, right. Then Why it matters? Let's see: The wealth gains for energy billionaires and oil firms coincide with devastating energy and food price inflation for low and middle-income households, while reduced G7 aid to low-income countries exacerbates existing economic, debt and climate-related shocks in those regions. Wait wait, make sure no adjectives, no speculation, just factual. Wait let's refine What happened first: Oxfam's analysis published ahead of the G7 summit in Évian, France found that 41 G7 energy billionaires' collective wealth rose by $23.5 billion since the start of U.S. and Israeli military action against Iran, G7 official aid to the world's poorest countries fell by $48 billion between 2024 and 2025, global billionaire wealth has increased by nearly $10 trillion since 2020, and six major oil firms are projected to see 80% profit growth in 2026 relative to pre-conflict forecasts. Wait is that all factual? Let's check the original text: yes, Oxfam analysis pre G7 Evian, 41 G7 energy billionaires +23.5B since US/Israel war on Iran, G7 aid to poorest down 48B 2024-2025, global billionaires up ~10T since 2020, 6 oil majors profits up 80% vs pre-war forecasts, 152B total 2026. Correct. Then Why it matters? The concurrent gains for energy billionaires and oil firms occur alongside surging global energy and food prices that disproportionately harm low and middle-income households, while the cut to G7 aid to low-income countries worsens pre-existing economic instability, debt burdens and climate shocks in those regions. Wait wait, make sure no adjectives, no speculation. Let's make it tighter. Wait also, the original says Oxfam calls for G6 to act, but no, the what happened is the findings, right? Wait no, let's make What happened exactly factual, no extra. Let's adjust What happened: Oxfam's analysis published ahead of the G7 summit in Évian, France found that 41 G7 energy billionaires' combined wealth increased by $23.5 billion since the start of U.S. and Israeli military action against Iran, G7 aid to the world's poorest countries decreased by $48 billion between 2024 and 2025, global billionaire wealth has grown by nearly $10 trillion since 2020, and six major oil companies are projected to record 80% higher profits in 2026 than pre-conflict forecasts. That's good, no adjectives, all factual from the source. Then Why it matters? The wealth gains for energy billionaires and oil firms coincide with rising global energy and food prices that impose severe costs on low and middle-income households, while the reduction in G7 aid to low-income countries exacerbates existing economic crises, debt burdens and climate-related shocks in those regions. Wait wait, "severe costs" is okay? No, wait, the original says "dévastatrices" but we can say "disproportionate harm"? No, wait, make it as objective as possible. Wait let's see: Why it matters? The concurrent wealth gains for G7 energy billionaires and major oil firms align with surging global energy and food prices that disproportionately impact low and middle-income households, while the $48 billion cut to G7 aid for the world's poorest countries worsens pre-existing economic instability, debt burdens and climate shocks in low-income regions. Wait that's better.