As a fellow outsider, I suspect that China will transition far more easily to renewable energy and fossil fuels alternatives far easier than the US, if for no other reason than thier style of leadership - "You will take your hydrogen powered car and like it!" as opposed to "I am entitled to drive my inneficient petrol car if I want to!"
You'll get adopters in the US once the oil starts to run low. After all, everyone knows Americans like having money, and it won't be too long until electric cars are less expensive than gasoline cars. The free market doesn't solve everything, but it does solve some things.
Also, the PRC administration won't be able to make their people transition if their people are trying to destroy them, which may well happen in the next few decades.
Yeah, but from an outsider point of view, I actually prefer China's point of view on climate change. Theirs is "We shouldn't be the one that do much about it, because we don't pollute that much per capita, and we've got an income gap to bridge." For a lot if not most of America's politicians it's "It snowed last year, so climate change is false!".
Per capita doesn't really give much comfort to the Chinese when there are entire cities where you have to wear a mask outside or choke on coal dust. I've said it before, I'll say it again: China is going to face a massive environmental collapse if they don't reverse direction soon.
Climate change denial is a passing fad, like evolution denial was. Even if there are people who still believe in either, they're fighting a losing battle.