preventing private investments could give state enterprises like Coal India an advantage, not sure that's good. then using public money to repair private gas pipelines is good because they might actually get fixed. as I've alluded to, both seem pretty okay to me.
something else i wish they would have committed to is a reduction in consumption of coal, oil, and natural gas/methane.
i saw one IRL today for the first time. was walking past the dealership in Chicago and they had one on display
there's a Rolls Royce and Maserati dealer a few block away. what i thought at the time is that these are toys for the rich to show off, publicity for the South African, and nothing more
imagine I'm reading through all of your comments and posts for the next hour or so of my life. all of my thoughts are centered on you. what you think, how you articulate, your sense of humor, what memes you like, everything you've made public. it's creepy.
i think a central barrier at the moment is fusion doesn't readily start a chain reaction like fission can. scientists are likely exploring the use of the yield of the fusion reaction to reload the reactor (kind of like an automatic firearm) and these techniques are far from mature in this setting.
PV is a simpler mechanism in every way and we've been studying it for more than 100 years. They're very different both technologically and maturity-wise
it's crazy that the US still leads the oil consumption charts. it's possible that'll never change if others don't sink money into the same infrastructure decisions the US did
preventing private investments could give state enterprises like Coal India an advantage, not sure that's good. then using public money to repair private gas pipelines is good because they might actually get fixed. as I've alluded to, both seem pretty okay to me.
something else i wish they would have committed to is a reduction in consumption of coal, oil, and natural gas/methane.