So you are saying we do nothing, let things get really bad and see what comes along, while we continue on a path that is obviously unsustainable?
No.
I'm saying recognise what has been achieved both accidentally and deliberately and stop hammering on with futile arguments that achieve nothing:
Although total vehicle mileage has risen as the fleet has expanded, the mileage per average individual has greatly reduced, by around 39% in fact, a huge reduction from a peak of 12k per annum to 7.3 k average.
Everyone is complaining about the overall rise in traffic, but are seemingly unaware that the rise has itself brought about the reduction in individual mileages due to several reasons.
In effect multiple problems causing the level of traffic have been condensed to the single true one at the root of all the climate problems, too many people.
When I was born there were 2 billion people in the world, now there are 8 billion. That is what is unsustainable and until that problem is successfully tackled we won't achieve anything.
To put this in a local perspective, when I was born the UK population was 47 million who almost entirely walked, cycled and rode on public transport. They typically had a bath once a week and each household did a once weekly hand wash of clothing etc. Their electricity use was minimal, almost entirely just lighting with gas mainly just for cooking.
Now there's 68 million people in the UK with half of them driving around in cars, vans etc. Often kept warm with central heating, they frequently shower every day, sometimes more than once. They randomly run their washing machine a few times a week and their electricity and gas usages are huge.
Little wonder that we've swapped the past's plentiful water with now not enough, but plentiful pollution and a failing climate instead.
I've no idea what the successful answer will be, or even if there will be one, but one thing is certain.
Getting a few people riding a bike isn't it.
.