The smoke and the fires are getting to be serious problems. I live in N. Cal. and 2 years ago, we had an unbearable heat wave and smoke at the same time. No AC, and would normally spend time outside, but couldn't go outside because it was too smoky to breathe.
During that cycle I did an interesting thing that might amuse other Tesla drivers- I used my Model 3 as an 'escape pod' to allow me to survive that scenario without having to leave the area. If you pull out the rear seat, then lower the back seats, you get a fully flat surface for the trunk. I put a sleeping bag in there, and set the car to be in Campfire mode with the AC on low. That combined with the air filter, gave me a clean and cool area and I could sleep and weather the storm. Still plugged into the wall, and no CO emissions in the garage.
When looking into cars, the Model 3 giant battery was also attractive to me to handle the safety power shutoffs that PG&E is now doing. Last time I got one it was 5 days out of power, and all my freezer food was ruined. It was not a deciding factor, but it was an attractive option that I can plug in an inverter to the car, and get 1500W out of the car to run the critical parts of my house. (Yeah, yeah, voids the warranty, blah, blah. Tesla FUD.) Tesla needs to step up their game and make this a built in option. It's stupid to not allow me to use the power in my battery when I need it. And I'm going to do it whether my corporate masters say it's OK or not.
The Eco aspect of owning the Model 3 is not zero for me. If it didn't drive like a champ I wouldn't have done it, but all things considered I'd rather help the problem than make it worse. Leaving a dying planet to our grandchildren is not exactly a genuinely conservative approach.