Yes.
The growing pains involved with switching from fossil fuels to renewables will absolutely affect your daughter. It's not going to be an easy transition. Jobs will dry up and people may die. I don't like that at all, but we have to do something and soon. The way it's going now (relying on fossil fuels) is not sustainable.
Just to be clear, I'm a huge proponent of switching to renewables. I'm also a realist tho, and understand that during the process things could get really ugly before it gets better.
It is absolutely impossible to replace fossil fuels with renewables. May be you can replace 20 to 30%. Trying to do more will create colossal environmental damage.
The UK is getting 20% of its power from wind.
The destruction of thousands of sea birds, from the massive wind farm on the Dogger Bank in the North Sea has been tragic this year.
Gas is in short supply across Europe. Just recently the wind did not blow for four days across the UK. They came close to rolling blackouts, and were only saved by restarting four coal fired power stations.
The UK have been waking up to this, and are planning a massive investment in more nuclear power. One will be online soon in Somerset supplying 14% of UK power.
Also planed are local community nuclear plants using the Rolls-Royce submarine nuclear plants.
It will turn out that nuclear will be the most reliable, and least environmentally destructive approach.
Converting to handle that enormous electric load increase will require massive investment mot only in power stations, but in sub stations local transmission lines and local transformers.
I tried to future proof my house with a 400 amp panel. The power company would not let me, as they said the local infrastructure would not take it. So I put in a 200 watt. That will not come close to replacing my natural gas supply.
Then we have to talk about electrification of our entire rail system.
Then our trucking industry will have to convert to hydrogen. This will require massive amounts of electricity to produce it. Battery powered big rigs are an unrealistic pipe dream.
We will have to develop systems that make road traffic accidents virtually impossible, before we allow massive quantities of hydrogen barreling down our highways, and travelling through our cities.
The merchant marine is a huge CO2 producer, and no one even has a clue how to solve that. Even less clue how to power aircraft.
The problems are just gigantic, and I fear we have left the changes to our infrastructure far too late.
We don't even know how to solve a lot of the problems I mention. All of them, and probably many I have not thought of, will need solutions before we get even close to carbon neutral.