Michel Jullian wrote:

There may be no wind power in Georgia, but your electricity network may be interconnected with other networks far away where there is wind power, that's the nicety of these networks (makes up for their ugliness).

States with significant wind resources are thousands of miles away, and you cannot transmit electricity that far. Georgia has no significant renewable energy resources.

It is a shame you cannot transmit electricity 2000 miles because if you could, we could establish a massive solar thermal plant in a 100 square mile area of the Southwest desert, and generate all the electricity we now consume. Or we could do the same trick with wind farms in North Dakota. Alas, it is impossible. Someday high temperature superconducting wires or hydrogen pipelines may allow electricity to be transmitted across the continent.


Now would potential US wind power be enough to recharge all US automobiles at some time or other of the night do you think?

Potential US wind power could supply more energy than you get from burning the entire flow of oil from the Middle East. It could easily supply all of the energy consumed by everyone in North America. For that matter, so would a 200 square mile area of the desert. One hundred to replace all electricity, another 100 to replace all other sources of energy.

Renewable energy such as solar and wind could easily meet all of our needs indefinitely, if only we had the technology to harness it. However, it would be thousands of times more expensive than cold fusion. (As are present day fossil fuel and uranium fission.) If we develop wind and solar power for the next 500 years, the price will fall until it is far cheaper than today's energy, but it will never fall to anything like the level that cold fusion could reach. Look at the 25 kW solar generator here:

http://www.stirlingenergy.com/imagesdet.asp?type=allsolar&imageID=11

This prototype costs hundreds of thousands of bucks, but look at the materials and the size of the gadget. You can imagine that after 50 years of manufacturing millions of these things the cost falls to, say, $5,000. It is no bigger or more complicated than a small automobile. That would be $200/kW, for with zero fuel cost, compared to $6,000/kW for nuclear plants (where the fuel costs practically nothing), or $2,000/kW for wind (where the fuel costs absolutely nothing). In other words, in 50 years these things could easily produce electricity far cheaper than it is today.

Now think of a 25 kW cold fusion generator. After 50 years of intense development, you can imagine one the size of today's 25 kW portable generators that costs $1,000, or maybe even $500. It would have no moving parts and it would last for 30 years, or maybe 50 years. (As far as I know, thermoelectric devices in a pristine, sealed environment cannot degrade much.) The gadget would not need an electric power grid. It would work 24 hours a day, unlike the Stirling Energy 25 kW generator. It would also serve as a space heater in a cogenerator configuration. Over the life of the machine the heavy water fuel it consumes would cost a few dollars. Clearly, that would reduce the cost of energy far below the levels you could achieve with the Stirling generator. The only thing remotely comparable would be 25 kW hydroelectric generator on your own property 50 feet from your house, in a climate where the stream never freezes or dries up. Even that would call for much higher maintenance costs, and much more expensive generating equipment which would have to be replaced more often.

- Jed


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