BartenderElite
Verified User
With solar and wind, the principles are very well-established science and engineering. Solar has been around for more than a century. Wind power is centuries old even if it has only been applied to electrical power generation for less than a century. Neither is going to suddenly sprout some new scientific principle that will radically change how it works. Batteries are the exact same way. They've been around for about two centuries--not including potential ancient ones that were not really understood. The chemistry of batteries will not change because the periodic table isn't going to suddenly sprout Unobtainum or some other fantasy atom that doesn't already exist.
Innovation in many things isn't going to happen. Tiny, incremental improvements aren't going to suddenly make the useless useful.
The bolded is like saying in the '70's that computers would go nowhere because we have had computers for thousands of years (we have - but not like they were in the '70's).
The amount of time that wind & solar technology have actually been a focus of innovation is a blip.
We're not going to agree on this. There is generally always a "Eureka" moment in any technology that leads to an accelerated leap. People will figure out how to better harness and distribute wind & solar, in ways that no one can imagine right now, and likely in ways that most couldn't even comprehend.