Trump might just do some good here if he manages a thumping global recession... that's a pretty good way to bring down emissions by a decent bit.
One of the biggest problems, and a source of extensive (as far as I let external things bother me, which isn't much) frustration is just how staggeringly
moronic the anti-climate-change types are in their proposals and lifestyles - or, a better term, the "optics" of their proposals.
It's quite rare to find any of the "climate activists" who live a particularly low impact lifestyle - Al Gore is a particularly high lightening rod here, but it's quite common to find people who consistently live a "Do as I say, not as I do!" lifestyle, when it comes to carbon emissions. Gunhild Stordalen being one of the more recent examples - demand everyone eat a meat-free diet, fly around the world on her and her husband's private jet, fly friends around for a party, etc. I'm not actually opposed to private aviation when it makes sense, but I'll suggest that if you are demanding other people do something to have a fairly minor impact on global emissions, living a genuinely carbon-intensive party lifestyle may reduce the traction your message gets. People, like it or not, are rather sensitive to hypocrisy, and it's found in great quantities among those who demand others do things.
Al Gore is the common example, because despite (flying) around the country to give presentations on carbon emissions, it's remarkably difficult to tell, by his lifestyle, that he actually believes it's a problem. Yes, sure, he works from home... I've heard the list of excuses for why a remarkably energy hungry 10k sq ft house is "required" for him to do stuff, and I'll suggest that most people on this forum have a far lower impact that he does. Plus, yes, he put solar panels on - but they were a fairly small array that made a rather tiny dent in his energy consumption. Sure, they were expensive, but he had the money he could have done a proper offsetting system, even a decade and change ago. So, when people who are the figureheads of the movement won't put their money where their mouth is, why would other people believe they actually care and aren't just looking for a lever to use to control other people?
The utter obsession over carbon (and inability to talk about
anything but carbon, even to an audience that doesn't care) reminds me of the joke about colored elephants. How do you kill a blue elephant? With a blue elephant gun. How do you kill a red elephant? Choke it until it's blue and then use a blue elephant gun. If you're attempting to make a point to an audience that don't consider "But CARBON!!!!" as a valid reason to change their lifestyle, perhaps consider something other than carbon? Know your audience and all that.
I've got a Volt in a pretty deep red area of the country. I interact with people who don't believe carbon is a particular problem. My approach doesn't involve pointing out that they should first care about carbon then... buy a Tesla, or whatever the proper action to show you Care(TM) is. It's pointing out the other merits of plug in hybrid/electric transportation, talking up homeowner installed solar (the solar companies out here are criminally expensive), pointing out the benefits of ebikes (which, to be fair, I need to get my high speed runner built), etc. We manage a fairly low carbon footprint out here, but it's not something I bludgeon people with, because most people I talk to don't care. Now, the energy/food independence stuff we're working towards? That's of substantial interest, so, I tend to sell that side of things. And I work from home, so my commute is more or less non-existent.
I also own an area-appropriate truck (F350, CCLB, 7.3 Powerstroke diesel). It's not a problem, and isn't seen as a point of hypocrisy, because I don't use it for things that don't require a truck - nor am I telling people they should Definitely Sell the Truck (as is common in
certain circles). I just point out that I don't use it as a commuter, because it's damned expensive to run, and if I can accomplish something without the truck, I will. It's an area of the country with larger lots, so having a few vehicles isn't a big deal. Having a commuter car (electric or PHEV) and a truck just isn't that difficult out here.
But, seriously, people who don't live their lives like they give two shits about carbon, lecturing other people on why they can't have hamburgers? I'm not at all surprised they haven't managed to make a damned bit of difference. And, no, paying for carbon indulgences doesn't help the optics of it.
Not sure how productive the conversation can get when many people that just can't get over their self righteousness. On individual level, have less children, eat less red meat (especially the free roam kind), always fly coach, keep your home temp <65F . Oh, also ditch all of your cryptos to me, I will bear your crypto sins for you free of charge cuz i am nice.
Oh, man, I'm going to have to upgrade my air conditioner to keep it under 65 in the summer...
So, simple question: Do you do all those things?
Policy-wise you can try to abolish private planes or even first class seats, build less rails and roads not more (except in heavily populated corridors with enough demand), set limits on how big a house (or living space per person) can be, etc. When I was doing school in the UK my entire flat was the size of my master bathroom today, smaller homes usually translate to smaller footprint. You could also go after the farmers/ranchers for their share of carbon-tax, but i gotta warn you, that's going to push them further to Trump.
The problem isn't so much private aviation, as private jets. A good turboprop is still far faster than flying commercial, and is quite a bit more efficient than a jet. You can't directly compare L/passenger/mile numbers, as almost all commercial trips are spoke and hub, with far more miles flown than you'd fly straight line. Even comparing to driving, the whole "straight from where you are to where you want to be" thing screws with the numbers.
I'm not picking on you in particular, but if you care about carbon emissions, why do you live in a house that has a larger master bath than your previous apartments? It's not the sort of thing that really reduces planetary impact...
You could try to balance it out for the rural folks by making it easier for them to sell the electricity they generate back to the grid to bring the emission down on the power generation front. But then of course you run the risk of people flooding the grid if the numbers aren't right, also effectively people with abundant land would benefit.
The rural grid generally isn't suited to large scale transmission of power. It tends to be built out "about enough to work," and isn't going to handle massive power flows into populated areas without transmission upgrades - which then means large industrial scale solar, which isn't the sort of thing you can do in your back 40. On the other hand, that's still a far better use of money than rooftop solar. Large scale solar is around $1/W installed, residential is $3-4/W installed. You get far, far more bang for your buck with the big farms.