Large transnational corporations, supranational institutions and governments, with the endorsement of numerous international organizations and experts, began to place the need for decarbonization of the energy matrix at the center of the economic and political agenda. The Paris Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals ( sdgs) became the main pro-government references with the purpose of generating shared international frameworks.
At the national level, several India Email List created their Green Pacts or Green New Deals and even ministries of Ecological Transition. Supranational actors, such as the European Commission, also promoted a European Green Pact, formulated with the aim of being the first "climate neutral" continent. The “NetZero towards 2050” discourse thus began to appear in a large part of the discourses of the dominant communities, including some that years ago were openly deniers and now began to offer “climate solutions”. This is how the most recent of the capitalist consensuses emerged: the “Decarbonization Consensus”.

The "Decarbonization Consensus" is based on a widely accepted common goal. In the end, in a world wounded by collapse, who could oppose decarbonization and climate neutrality? The main problem is not the what , but the how.. Decarbonization is welcome, but not this way. Among the purposes of this hegemonic decarbonization are not the deconcentration of the energy system, the care of nature, much less global climate justice, but other types of motivations such as attracting new financial incentives, reducing the dependency of some countries in search of energy security, the expansion of market niches or the improvement of the image of companies.