The issue is that you're not actually presenting specific statements, but rather using the video to back up a broad argument, which the video is pushing for ideological reasons. I'm not going to sit through an entire video and debunk it point-by-point.And you gave me a Guardian article with the last source you cited, which has a massive political slant too. Everyone is biased to some degree, you can't just say such and such source/person is wrong because of political interest. Explain how she is wrong with what she said, which you never do, you only use ad hominem attacks.
The Guardian article was posted to address a specific point you made. The information on that point is accurate. And it has stats and links to follow.
How, exactly, is the transition too fast and harmful?Barrelling towards some net zero policy is also harmful. Germany dismantled wind turbines to mine more coal. Investing in nuclear would've been a far better use of money and resources. Renewables just don't mix well with our current electrical grids so slowing transitioning to them be a better option than just going full steam ahead. And we have an amazing solution in nuclear power to use until we are ready to move to other renewables.
Given that fossil fuels are already, right now, wiping out hundreds of species, flooding liveable and arable land, exacerbating natural disasters, poisoning our air and water, shortening our lifespans. What exactly is the huge harm of renewables that mandates we stick with the suicidal alternative?
How are renewables using less land than conventional power?
Wind and nuclear are the most land-efficient. Hydro and most forms of solar are more land-efficient than coal, but do use more land than gas, to be fair.
I should adjust my statement to "dedicated land". Because part of the point is that land used for renewables can often also be used for other purposes at the same time-- farming, or roofing. And the land is then either continuously generating energy, or can be repurposed afterwards. Whereas with fossil fuels, the land cannot be used for anything else, and is then destroyed when all resources are extracted.

