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To be more specific, I said that it's a matter of adaptation, which it is. You're always missing the forest for the trees - on purpose at that. It's truly remarkable. I outlined precisely what's wrong with the current state of technology that prevents us from moving onto "primarily green energy", so by all means, educate yourself. When you figure out how to store 15 terawatts of the world's energy need, with the ability to scale upwards, give us all a quick run-down. Besides standard power walls we have a couple candidates going - using the generated energy to produce hydrogen for later use (this is implemented in hydrogen stations in some locations specifically for hydrogen vehicles), compressed/liquified air, pumped water towers, flow batteries and other unconventional batteries I've mentioned earlier. Until we're capable of storing energy for use when "it's not windy" or "it's not sunny" for more than just individual households going 100% renewable, or anywhere close to "primary source" is a complete pipe dream. It's a great supplemental source, it absolutely is not a replacement, and no engineer worth their salt will claim otherwise.There is nothing about our current technologies that prevents us from moving to primarily green energy. To do this though, the solutions are going to have to be systemic. That means laws, regulations, etc.
Last edited by Foxi4,









