Still, hunting borderline negative temperatures at idle is like shooting rats with an RPG. It works but it's a complete overkill. Factory defects are much more dangerous than anything below +100C.
I have actually never had a factory defect on a PC I build myself or on computers I bought either.
I have seen it many times when other people's computers suddenly stop working. But this is often to do with the way they handle them.
I have seen high idle temperatures in small mini-towers and over 10-year-old cheap laptops.
I have several old laptops that with some operating systems just overheat and shut down as a safeguard.
It is also just an indication of your cooling. Many people almost never see 100% CPU utilisation (on all cores) when using a recent high-end CPU.
If I play e.g. 0 A.D. on this OpenBSD computer, and I leave the FPS unlimited, my CPU is 32° C hot.
The difference between idle and the most ‘taxing tasks’ that I do is often not that big in reality.
I mean, in real life, I'm not going to let 0 A.D. generate unlimited FPS, I'm going to set a 60 FPS limit.
It won't get much warmer than my idle temperature then.
You can also use this test that way, keeping in mind that your PC will probably not frequently get more than 10°C warmer than this idle temperature.
Most persons are not running rendering or heavy multi-core apps.
Then again, gaming is popular, but the majority of games are lightweight on the CPU.
Idle temperatures are also an indication of how much heat the CPU generates in idle.
More heat means more power draw. It also directly heats up the climate of course. But the extra power it draws also causes climate warming.
So it has a two-fold effect.
And solar panels are not green by the way. In Germany had the highest percentages the contribution to total energy consumption was laughably low.
Batteries and panels are a gigantic mass of toxic material.
Many countries are too poor to recycle, and recycling, like standard production, is an indurstial process that often generates a lot of extra pollution and extra emissions.