Is it a moral judgement to say that when the stove is on fire, we shouldn't be pouring more grease on it?
Is it a moral judgement to say that you shouldn't pick up a bear cub with its mother nearby?
If neither of these are moral judgements, then why would it be a moral judgement to say that humanity should be seeking to reduce its emissions? Just because you personally don't like it, and want to keep doing whatever you like?
Pouring grease on a fire will make it worse. Picking up a bear cub when the mother is nearby will increase (by how much I don't know) the risks of getting attacked by a bear. Both of those sentences to me sound like genuine description of the reality we live in. Climate change is real and caused by human emissions is another one of those, though a bit less precise as "climate change" is less precise. Saying we should or shouldn't do something is something different.
Also, you can increase power capacity by a lot while reducing emissions, with stuff like solar panels or nuclear power.
Is it a moral judgement to say that you shouldn't pick up a bear cub with its mother nearby?
If neither of these are moral judgements, then why would it be a moral judgement to say that humanity should be seeking to reduce its emissions? Just because you personally don't like it, and want to keep doing whatever you like?