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That's a pretty contentious assertion to just plop down. I think you're mistaken, and my guess is that the source of the error is you considering people's "interests" quite narrowly. Are you following a logic of "decarbonisation will make many/most things more expensive while delivering equivalent/worse service, therefore it's against most people's interests?"
Yes. This will be true for every person in the world that doesn't have a specific decarbonization profit plan (your Al Gore, Tesla, etc). It will also be true for the descendants thereof. For all "crises" (of which atmospheric CO2 is a dubious one, see the work of David Friedman) typically the better approach is to just outgrow it. We did this with, for example, smog, vacuum tube tvs, leaded petrol, lemon cars, etc. We also have largely done it with incandescent lights and heavy coal. We have yet to do that with gas stoves/heat and ICEs.
Smog and leaded petrol both required government intervention because the pollution is an externality. Leaded petrol is still better than unleaded from the point of view of the engine, which is why Avgas is still leaded.
The same is true of CO2 - the reason why the worst-case scenarios associated with RCP8.5 (which people like David Friedman correctly point out won't happen, despite the amount of research funding going into working out just how bad they are and the media attention this attracts) will not, in fact, happen, is that governments saw the problem and acted to mitigate it - mostly by subsidising the R&D and early adoption of the technologies (PV cells, efficient wind turbines, electric cars etc.) that will support a lower-carbon society.
Achieving RCP4.5 instead of RCP8.5 is in everybody's interest (except for a few selfish Boomers) because it is the difference between your grandchildren thriving and (with an unacceptably high probability) frying. Fortunately, it doesn't require a Great Reset to achieve. But achieving it has required and will continue to require elites to talk to each other about decarbonisation at places like Davos, and COP meetings, and G20 summits. Going further to achieve RCP3.4 or RCP2.6 isn't in the interests of Red Tribe Americans who have large sunk investments in a high-carbon lifestyle, but it would be in the interest of a lot of people if the technology to do it at a reasonable cost exists. (Tip from a physicist - it does, it's called nuclear power).
In a sane world, working out whether RCP3.4 is a good idea or not requires both elites talking to each other about what can be done and what it might cost, and voters talking to each other about whether it is a good idea or not given the facts that emerge from that conversation. In the world we actually live in, this won't happen, among other reasons because the culture war is making us stupid and US climate policy is going to be decided by whether ragetweets about Hunter Biden's laptop are more or less viral than ragetweets about George Santos' CV. Davos is selling (at an extremely high price) the idea that these conversations are happening and that business executives are valued participants in them.
Pardon me, but that's complete and utter nonsense.
Whatever lower carbon intensity is achieved in allegedely civilized regions places like 'Eu' or Canada is going to be completely swamped by Indians, Chinese and whomever is clever enough to build a coal-fired power plant.
Also please do not that countries that in the EU, the countries that most heavily adopted the technologies you name, generally have worse carbon emissions than countries that stuck to their legacy tech such as nuclear power plants.
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