I think solving climate change is an urgent problem, but there is cause for some optimism over the coming decade with the now obvious transitions to EVs and renewables with battery power smoothing out intermittent renewables. Solar is the cheapest form of power generation in most places and since solar panels are much cheaper than batteries, build for the winter and shortest day. We can have an overabundance for 9 months of the year that you can do interesting things with, like make electrochemical cement or even small-scale ammonia among other things. Battery storage could be keep to a minimal and there would be backup NG turbo generators just in case. Several studies have shown we can do it with renewables and batteries, without even the projected improvements in solar or batteries and both are dropping like stones in cost.
As for agriculture that emits a lot of greenhouse gases, methane and CO2, livestock farming for dairy, meat and eggs, which could be harder to replace, but what happens if by PF, plant-based meats or culture meats that shrank by 50% over the next decade, an eternity in a fast-moving high tech field as big as biotechnology. Unlike computer science, this is much broader in scope, people working with yeast know nothing about aquaculture approaches and people are fermenting fungi too, not just yeast. Better bioreactors with nutrient flowing through multiple screens or felts of collagen fiber impregnated with several types of tissue cells might revolutionize the cell culture of meat. It is a field worth keeping an eye on, if one is interested in progress on climate change. If we can cut transport and power generation emissions and put a dent in livestock agriculture in a decade along with starting the cleanup of industry things might be much brighter on the climate front in 2035. There is cause for optimism in the field of biotechnology, life produces proteins, that what it mostly does. There are many possible approaches to animal product substitutions from, plant, to fungal, to yeast and to perhaps cell or macro-organism culture or something from the animal kingdom, the fight to replace or mitigate livestock agriculture is by no means over.