The Presenter told the 3C summit audience that "Energy is life," arguing that access to modern energy underpins longer life expectancy, economic opportunity and social progress. He said the world's poorest households remain trapped using wood, dung and agricultural waste for cooking and heating, a practice the speaker said contributes to an estimated 2 to 3 million deaths each year, citing World Health Organization estimates.
The speaker framed the indoor-cooking problem as the "world's greatest energy challenge and environmental challenge," and described it as solvable. "A propane cookstove can transform the human condition," he said, adding that improving household stoves would "liberate women" and extend life.
In support of his point, the Presenter contrasted the roughly 1 billion people who already live high-energy lifestyles with about 7 billion people who aspire to similar living standards, stressing that meeting those expectations will require "massively, massively more energy." He argued that addressing household energy poverty is both urgent and achievable by scaling practical technologies.
The address did not include a proposed funding plan or a specific multilateral program; the speaker emphasized technological and market solutions (clean stoves, liquefied petroleum gas) rather than naming exact grants, deadlines, or implementing agencies. No formal motion or vote followed the remarks; the session continued with broader policy discussion at the summit.