Who is so muddled and confused that they can't even read their source correctly. Go back and read your source again friend, the unit detailed at the top of the table is in cents, ie 21.50 CENTS, not dollar as in your post. You are also being rather disengeous in stating a price that is five years old, ie the price you are stating in your post is from 2000, not 2005. I'll let you scroll down the table for yourself and find out what the current price is. Confused and disengenous is not a good way to go through life friend.
And a couple of things that you're convienently forgetting about new technologies. One is that technological innovations bring down prices. A current innovation in solar energy, the Sunflower, offers prices as low as 6-8 cents per kilowatt hour<
http://www.redherring.com/Article.aspx?a=12464&hed=Energy+Innovations+Gets+Cash>
Then there is a new innovation in solar power called Thin Film Photovoltaics which is looking to provide energy for as low as 1 cent per kilowatt hour.<
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy00osti/23700.pdf#search='thin%20film%20pv%20price%20per%20kilowatt%20hour'>
I also noticed that you didn't even touch the issue of wind energy in your reply. Why is that? Does the notion of 4 cents per kilowatt hour negate your arguement that alternative energy is only for the rich?<
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/10/1028_041028_alternative_energy_2.html> Because that is what it does. And like I said previously, the DOE has done a study on the United States energy resources, and they found that there is enough harvestable wind resources in North Dakota, South Dakota and Texas to fulfill the entire American electrical needs through 2030. Oh, and that DOE study was done in 1991. Wind tech has advanced a great deal since then.
And you are also ignoring a fundemental economic law, that of supply and demand. As more and more people start buying PV and wind energy, the price will continue to shrink. Meanwhile, as limited supplies of non-renewable energy sources continue to run out, including uranium, the prices for those sources of energy will continue to skyrocket. Hmmm. And the current best estimates of how long the world supply of low cost uranium will last is only twenty years<
http://www.worldenergy.org/wec-geis/publications/default/tech_papers/17th_congress/3_2_12.asp> Granted, technological innovations such as breeder reactors will mitigate the extra cost, but large scale breeders are still having technical problems and at this point are unreliable as energy sources<
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breeder_reactor> In addition, the US only holds three percent of the world's supply of uranium. And once that is used up, we will again be over an energy barrel, forced to rely on other countrys for our energy needs, rather than our own domestic sources. Gee, haven't you learned anything from our oil troubles?
Then we run into the two HUUUUGE problems with nuclear energy, human error and what to do with the waste. Human error is the most common cause of mistakes, both inside and outside of the nuclear industry. It has been proven time and again that despite how technically sophisticated a system is, human error will sooner or later strike, causing major problems. Now then, with conventional electric generators, the problems caused by human error, while serious, certainly don't have the long term ramifications that human error at a nuclear plant does. While human error at a hydro electric plant has the potential to put acres of land under water temporarily, and possibly even kill people, human error at a nuclear plant no only kills people in the short run, it also can continue to kill for generations and lay vast swathes of land to waste. For further reference, just look at Chernobyl, both then and now. For something as dangerous and critical as nuclear power, you cannot afford to have one single error. But human nature dictates that you will have many more errors than just one. Thus the inherent lack of safety at a nuclear plant, and the great danger of them as well.
Then there is also the issue of waste. Until a safe, permanent way of dealing with nuclear waste is developed, we cannot afford to create anymore. Yucca Mt. is a joke, as dye studies on the groundwater suggests that once nuclear wastes leak out of their containers(and they will, remember, we're talking of a span of tens of thousands of years or longer), Las Vegas drinking water will be contaminated in as short a time as two weeks. Nor can we continue to store nuclear waste on site at reactors. Not only is it a security risk, but again the problems of leakage and the water supply are in play. Until we solve the problem of nuclear waste we need to stop making it.
Oh, another thing that you didn't mention is biodiesel. An off the shelf technology that requires minimal, if any modifications to normal diesal vehicle, is a cheap fuel, a boon to our farmers, and provides reliable energy that benefits the pocketbook, our nations' farmers, and the enviroment also. Start making hybrid diesel vehicles, and we have a solution to the daily commute.
As far as the grid goes, your failure to grasp the concept of the grid is obvious. Do you remember Enron, and how they made a killing by rerouting electricity over the national grid? Gee, did they lose ninety percent of their power shooting that electricity from Texas to California? Funny how that works, you know, inverters, step up and step down transformers, etc. Technology is amazing now isn't it. Look how far we've come from those DC days of Edison, when we DID lose ninety percent of the power due to resistance. But hey, we're now a technologicall advance nation, with AC power and everything.:eyes:
And it is funny that you mention poor people. Funny because in developing Third World countries the energy model being developed for those populations isn't nuclear, or fossil fuels. Nope, it is renewable energy, solar, wind, biomass, etc. Think that they know something you don't? I do.
Sorry friend, but if we're to have a sane, sensible energy future, we're going to have to go with renewables. They're cost effective, low pollution, safe, and allows us to energy self sufficient. Your little diatribe sounds like a script out of the late '70s. Well, it is time that you stepped into the twenty first century friend, and realize that nuclear is an obsolete and dangerous technology, while renewables are safe, reliable, cost effective, and well, last forever.