1. Why is putting of this debate fine? We have a problem now, we have a flawed but workable solution that is politically unpopular but workable short term in nuclear to fall back on while we get renewables developed, and we can't be certain that we will ever be in this position again. And if you want to get so picky as to call wear on the plant burning fuel, then any and all nuclear reactors will require more fuel then just fissionable materials because they aren't magically immune to maintenance.HMS Conqueror wrote:1. Putting the debate off 100 year is fine. Except hydro which is pretty much already maximally exploited, no power source we build now will last 100 years, including renewables (which are not really renewable - the plant is the fuel).
2. Fission fuel with breeders will last >10,000 years, which is too long to worry about in terms of our our piddling current technological capabilities.
3. I don't doubt a renewable grid could be built in terms of raw possibility. But why? It offers no advantage over nuclear and a lot of disadvantages.
4. I doubt renewables will ever be a major grid component. Possibly solar in the very long term. But nuclear fusion is showing greater improvement than the mass energy storage technologies needed to really make solar work.
2. OK, I'll leave you to work out the logistics of storing centuries worth of Nuclear waste. Centuries, mind you, where Nuclear is the primary energy source for every nation on the planet, none of whom will want to actually be responsible for storing it because it essentially means a large area of your landmass is unusable for more or less every other purpose for what amounts to forever.
3. We could build one now, yes, or we could actually take serious steps toward maturing the current renewable technologies over the next decade, like we should have been doing for the last 3, using nuclear as a short term stopgap, and then build one before we start phasing out things like nuke plants.
4. We can actually make reliable batteries, and have been improving the batteries we can make noticeably. That alone is more progress toward mass energy storage than there has been toward workable fusion generators.
One of the really big problems with that sort of large scale power transfer, even when nothing is going wrong, is that you bleed so much power having to transmit it that you would almost be better off trying to power Europe with a solar plant that runs only at night than you would with one in the Sahara. The best solution is likely to be a bit of both, individual buildings with their own solar or wind generators attempting to provide enough power for themselves and feeding into the grid if they get an excess, as well as large scale hydro/solar/wind/geothermal/whatever else we can come up with feeding into the grid in order to pick up the slack. That would rely on the normally reliable plants like hydro being able to provide enough power in the case of eternal night or becalming though, and would benefit from the entire grid being able to feed into mass storage devices to supplement that as well.I don't think many advocates of renewable energy are really talking about that kind of project though, because in addition to the vulnerabilities you already mentioned there's considerable logistical problems involved in running a large-scale solar power plant in such a hostile region, not to mention the problem of transmission fall-off.
The main application of solar power that people are talking about right now is to carpet the roofs of existing buildings with solar panels and connect them to a power regulator that can draw on the grid if demand exceeds supply, and feed excess power back into the grid -for a corresponding rebate on one's electric bill- if supply exceeds demand. Panel technology is nowhere near efficient enough to guarantee self-sufficiency even for private homes, but it could certainly shoulder a large fraction of the burden of power generation without taking up any space or needing much infrastructure support.