RadiorGuy said:
But when the scale of a problem gets big enough, there is a threshold where the economic cost goes second behind actually finding a solution.
Even when the scale of the problem is huge, it's STILL an economic problem. Look at WWII. The scale could not be bigger a World War that must be fought on two fronts. After most of the world had already been captured (or was in imminent danger of being captured) by the Axis powers.
How was it even possible for the USA to fight that way? There was will of the populace and the public to fight the war. Sure, that came first with Pearl Harbor. Then it became an economic problem... HOW do we fight the war? How do we fund the war efforts? Where do we put our money? Navy? Army? Research to fund weapon development? How do we keep our people from starving while we're funding the war?
Look at the cold war. This ended up being, above anything else a war of economics. The Socialist Countries had such terrible economies (because of their political choices) that they couldn't support the populations they had. They couldn't fight wars effectively. They couldn't even keep their people from fleeing to other countries where the standard of living was better. All of this was primarily an ECONOMIC disparity between countries.
The fight against Global Warming will ALWAYS be largely a question of Energy Economics. What is the most efficient use of the limited resources we have to address the problem? What forms of energy are most efficient in reducing our CO2 footprint. What is the "opportunity cost" of implementing (or not implementing" the proposed solutions?
If we do something (like the Inflation Creation Act) and that causes hardship (though job losses, and high inflation), then the politicians who voted for it may be forced to retire or get voted out of office. The country may revolt. So, it's science, economics, politics and a myriad of other things.... Heck, it's even a religion for people who believe on faith what the prophets are saying.