Skgoa wrote:someone_else wrote:That's where I'd put my chips on to save our ass from energy crisis.
And thats the attitude that I can't understand. Why insist on a one-size-fits-all solution?
Yeah. I'll take what I can get, thankyouverymuch.
My point is that which solution(s) get(s) adopted as the main one(s)* is going to depend on a huge complex of factors, chief among them cost. If it costs a dollar per kilowatt-hour to generate the electricity, people will find ways to make do with a lot less electricity because it's just plain not worth the bother, no matter
how impressive and shiny and advanced the power plant is. People will make do with one dim bulb instead of two brighter ones, power economy will be
the killer app for computers, and so on. This is just common sense; it's the same thing that we see when gas prices hit four dollars a gallon.
The majority of the world's power will
always be generated in the most cost-effective way possible. Which methods are most cost-effective is up in the air, and to really get the answer is a job for ten years' study of civil engineering and industrial considerations. Plus, the answers change over time.
Anyone who makes a fetish out of fission power or solar cells or wind turbines is just being silly.
*There are two forms of this sentence, with one and two S's respectively.