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Notes -
Fair enough, my ideal energy policy is stopgaps now + nuclear while pushing towards nuclear fusion or at least breeder reactors for a longer term solution, I don't think we're far apart.
On the other hand, there are opportunities for gas that aren't exploited, fracking in much of the non-US world. For example the UK still has a decent amount of North Sea resources but they refuse to offer new exploration licenses. In Australia we had all these politicians investing in 'green hydrogen'. $17 billion AUD has already been committed...
Renewable power economics seems like an overly complicated system with solar and wind and batteries, requiring all this sophisticated grid management, power going back and forth, lots of new HVDC, negative prices at noon. I know there are all these studies saying that renewable energy has lower levelized cost of energy or some similar statistic yet I just can't bring myself to believe them when real-world power prices seem to rise and rise continually and the countries that invest most in renewables have the most expensive electricity, unless they're hydrologically blessed.
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