So personal preparation may be more productive than proselytizing the remaining anti-AGW heathens.
From a cynical point of view (on which I'm an expert) it's better
not to persuade people to plan for AGW, since they'd be competing with us. Better to hold the high ground (so to speak) when they discover they need it. And there are indeed business opportunites. I'm sure many businesses have acknowledged the reality of AGW and are planning on that basis, to the extent that they can. (The top Exxon echelon may well not believe the propaganda they push.)
Probably more businesses assume no significant change from the status quo - we've seen the "End of History", after all. Journey's end. AGW, Peak Oil - wha'?
t's time to get in on the ground floor (unless you're near the sea).
GoogleEarth for Cardiff, UK, if you're unfamiliar with its location. For a time, about 1850-80, the busiest port in the world by bulk. (London was the busiest by value, obviously. Cardiff imported bananas, molasses, rum and tobacco, not silks and spices of the Orient.)
My house is at 10m elevation, two-story, and stone-built. It can be proofed against the occasional flood, but my garden would suffer mightily. Salt-water flooding,
not good. All the same, it should see me out.
Go short on dollars. Go long on minerals. Steer well clear of complex leveraged financial instruments - get into what you can clearly distinguish from high-falutin' woo-talk with graphs. (Not advice you really need, of course.)
There could well be a dot.con-like frenzy in the alternative-energy sector at some point, which would we worth riding
if you get out at the right time. Once that's over, the reality-based AE market will probably be under-priced, a good time to get in on a carefully considered basis. You'll have more evidence to go on by then.
While your capital is soundly parked and earning, you could consider punting some high-falutin' AE technology with graphs and charts and PowerPoint, oh yes. A scientifically-proven sure thing that just needs development capital. The next MicroSoft. Nothing so crass as free-energy, of course. Something plausible.
They say poachers make good gamekeepers. Who better to do the woo than we

?