this post was submitted on 28 Apr 2025
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It's one of the solutions, yes.
But let's look at this more broadly. The idea of combining wind/water/solar/storage with long distance transmission lines isn't particularly new. The book "No Miracles Needed" by Mark Z. Jacobson (a Stanford Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering) outlined the whole thing in 2023, but was the sum total of the author's insight that he had had over a decade prior. Dumping all the money in one was never going to get us there.
Capitalism does sorta figure this out, but it takes steps of understanding as it focuses on one thing at a time. The first step dumps money into the thing that's cheap and gives the best ROI (solar). Then there's too much of that thing, and the economics shifts to covering up the shortfalls of that part (be it wind or storage or whatever). That makes it better, but there's still some shortfalls, so then that becomes the thing in demand, and capitalism shifts again.
It does eventually get to the comprehensive solution. The one that advocates in the space were talking about decades before.
The liberal solution--the one that leaves capitalism fundamentally intact--is to create a broad set of government incentives to make sure no one part of the problem gets too much focus. Apparently, we can't even do that.