The famous "ecological" transition is only an economic transition, an adaptation to an inevitable evolution *, at least if we want to extend the "system" a little further (I say system for short), because it is the only way out of recovery currently possible ...
For me, it's more than an economic transition.
It is also a technological transition in the broad sense: building with other materials, cultivating and fertilizing otherwise, developing new technologies in heating, the production of goods, etc.
It is also a radical change in our relationship with other species in the living world - moving from predator-plunderer mode to a lasting relationship with our roommates on this planet.
It is also about moving from consumerism to the growth of well-being and happiness.
On this last point, I am not pessimistic: at work, the former work without counting their hours to pay for the trip as far as possible (less than 5000 km is totally corny). Shit life.
Young people do their hours without more. They are indifferent to their box (if not independent). What matters most is not work like the elders, but family and leisure. They do not run after the medal of work.
But young people consume, consume, consume. They are prisoners of the GAFA pub. But they are aware of it.
They are lost in the media fog of social networks, not good at work, badly housed, poorly paid for the most part.
For the moment they do not see the direction which it is necessary to take to change the company. It is certainly not easy when on all forums we are surrounded by fake news, disinformation and threads where people are twisting their buns like old people.
And yet young people will be the key to a change or not in this society at the end of this health crisis.