biochem wrote:And agreed that non-viable renewables shouldnt be built just because.
I'm not one of those who thinks we should go straight onto purely renewables. As you noted, at this stage that could cause problems. However, ignoring them is akin to a 2 pack a day smoker who knows he needs to cut down and quit ignoring nicotine patches because he justifies it by claiming he will go straight cold turkey the instant a better solution is found. renewables arent the complete answer, just one step in the right direction.
There are a lot of technical problems that only become apparent when one attempts to scale a technology. So leaping from lab scale to full blown industrial production is flawed from that perspective as well. That said the worst recession since the great depression isn't the best time to experiment with inefficient renewables.
I would actually suggest its a good time to at least research and small scale trials, with the scale up to come at the end of a recession. everyone wants to cut costs in a recession to try and stay afloat. technologies and ideas that can save them money on power, taxes, resources, and that meet an expanding market are good ideas to follow.