Belial666 wrote:The main issue on Earth was that the oil/coal industry had 200+ years of development and refinement before anyone thought to build large-scale solar power plants. That drove the prices down and the efficiency up, and renewable sources had to play catchup in the commercial department. Despite that, commercial applications of such plants have already begun appearing.
After all, oil will eventually run out. Sun in the various deserts won't - and where else are you going to use the Mojave as, anyway?
In Safehold, there is no oil industry yet. Building a large-scale refinery isn't less costly than building a large-scale solar plant if you don't have the industry developed for either yet. Also, there's the whole prohibition of electricity thing.
Take it from me as a geologist, we are not running out of oil by any stretch of the mind. Our reserves of conventional oil are still higher than they have ever been in history. The stores of unconventional hydrocarbons are orders of magnitude larger.
The main issue with solar is the poor energy density and even poorer energy capture rate (throughput). Photovoltaic still only manage to capture and convert less than 15% of the energy that hits their surface (under ideal conditions). Solar-Thermal systems (what you are describing) are only a little better at around 25-35% (depending on latitude). The reason we use coal, oil, natural gas, and (especially) nuclear energy is that they are all energy dense. Solar, wind, and biofuels are by definition less energy dense because they require hundreds and thousands of acres to capture the energy. Whereas the few hundred acres of coal mines in wyoming provide about 20-30% of the electrical demand of the entire us (40% of us electricity is from coal, and 48% of US coal comes from the Powder river basin in WY and MT)
Give me a couple dozen geologists who understand structural traps, a few thousand roughnecks, and extremely primitive refineries and I could replace every candle and whale oil lamp on safehold. The refineries especially are easy, you look at a modern refinery and think they are complicated, and they are, but only because they are trying to change the characteristics of the oil we get out of the ground. We are trying to turn more of the unfavorable fractions of the oil into the more useful (and valuable) fractions. Make the very heavy oils lighter, and the lighter oils heavier into the Petrol/Jet Fuel/Diesel range. If you're willing to settle for the fractions nature gives you there is no need to get any more complicated than a distillation column, which safehold fully understands thanks to the alcohol industry.
Thanks to Merlin the early safeholdian oil industry shouldn't be plagued by the early oil industry on Earth. The rampant overproduction that destroyed fields, and shortened their lifetimes/recovery factors shouldn't happen. That alone would hugely increase the efficiency of manpower needed.
As a possible side benefit if you get a bunch of curious fellows started drilling for oil they are going to start asking where it comes from, why it migrates, and it might not take too long for some clever geologist (safeholdgist?) to start realizing that the oil has been there since before the day of creation..... Curious huh?