Likewise the ol' working under salt water environment... Can't even get ships to operate on the top of the stuff for long periods of time and you are contemplated electrical/mechanical parts working for 30 years under? Get serious. Said systems likewise will seriously hamper wildlife. A little common sense here please. Even while European's are contemplating such idiocy, not a single project has been started, as yes, once the fuzzy good feel project gets sold to gullible suckers in government(or royalty in England's case), reality smacks each project in the face, and shocker of shocker, power grid operators actually want to know, RELIABILITY factors, and MTBF of said sea water turbines. Shocker I know, and OOPSIES, no one bothered to mention this little reality fact to those suckers in government who can't find their ass or their elbows with a clue stick.
If there was any justice in this world, said governments would pony up a few million to pay these companies(rabbits coming out of the hats by the 100) for testing of under sea water compatible turbines and see if even one of them actually has a way to get around the salt problem, let alone the barnacle problem... But no, these stupid government pukes put forth these giant glorious "schemes" to create power without even the basis for creating said power to start with. Ai. Yes, you hit a pet peeve of mine.
PS. Thin films... Time marches on. Seems definitions as well. Thin films to me were literally, a film and sorry anything made out of plastic unless its FEP is not durable no matter what they say. UV. Period end of story. That ol' buggaboo about Florine though... Does let more light through than glass on the other hand. Insanely expensive due its need for Florine.
PPS. Wind has a very small niche market, and while it sounds nice, will never be a true power source for the world until 1) Power storage and 2) Super conducting power lines are created.
PPPS. Solar has more applicability than Wind even though its installation cost is vastly more expensive.
PPPPS. The installation of Heat pumps throughout the nation/world would instantly drop the residential electrical usage by 30%-50%. That right there would do more than any amount of solar(not quite), wind or tidal.
RandomGraysuit wrote:You're spot on with the efficiency, but glass on thin-film? Traditional, even thin-profile sure needs it, but membrane integrated thin-film is into applications as small and rugged as electronics-charging backpacks. Drag that stuff through the dirt, bang it around, spray it clean when you're done and it still works. If you do choose to use glass-covered panels, you can get efficiency over 20%.
You either get relatively cheap manufacturing costs and low efficiencies, or you get high efficiencies and higher costs. Thin-film's advantage is that while it's only generating a trickle charge, it can take a hailstorm and shrug it off.
Edit: My personal take on energy is "All of the above". Solar, in whatever form has the lowest long-term costs, in Arizona, New Mexico, California, Texas and Nevada. Tidal in Maine, Washington and Oregon, and look hard in other coastal states. Hydro all over the Rockies and Appalachian mountains. Geothermal up north. Wind in the flyover states. There's no one-stop miracle cure, but there *are* lots of potential solutions that are as cost-effective as fossil fuels and don't have that annoying state terrorism-funding aftertaste.