As I have said. Climate change is irrelevant. Fossil fuels are on their way out regardless.
Don't kid yourself. Despite all the "renewable" capacity that's claimed the world has, to the nearest whole number it still accounts for 0% of the total.
But it gets even more interesting. If we want to keep pace just with the increasing annual demand for hydro, the world would have to build something like 350,000 2MW turbines every year. That would take up a land area around the size of Great Britain, every year! That doesn't even take into account the replacement of fossil fuel powered generation.
The amount of steel required every year would be staggering and guess what you need to make steel? Coal. And guess what goes in those big turbine nacelles to keep everything lubricated? Around 900L of oil, and it sure ain't vegetable oil. That's around 78 million gallons of oil every year just for new wind turbines.
And then there's the large trucks you'll need to haul the parts around on. Electric powered trucks probably won't be used for the same reason electric locomotives aren't used for hauling long freight trains.
There's no question that the use of fossil fuels could be reduced without causing any real damage to anyone's economy, but they aren't going anywhere for a long time simply because electric power isn't as capable with the heavy lifting as fossil fuels are.
All those super-container ships (and supertankers) aren't going to be converting to wind or solar anytime soon, or at all for that matter.
Construction materials, everyday household goods, the natgas power plants that are required in order for commercial-scale wind or solar projects to even exist. Nah, fossil fuels ain't going anywhere for a long time.