I heard a quote sometime back along the lines of "Recent advances in financial services technology have all been about hiding transaction costs from consumers." (Think credit card 'rewards', etc.)
It is clear to me that renewables are the future of energy production. When you consider than human energy consumption (electricity and fuel burning) amounts to something like 0.02% of the solar energy hitting the Earth's surface, it is pretty clear that using solar power (Wind is indirect solar) is the way things will go _eventually_.
It is also clear that the true costs of energy production are pretty damn well hidden in a tangled web of different subsidies and ignored externalities.
If you don't believe that CO2 emissions are an environmental safety problem, then gas fired plants actually look quite good environmentally.
I believe that net CO2 emissions are in fact a problem. However when you compare human emissions to biosphere exchange, it seems clear to me that we would be far better off increasing biosphere sequestration of CO2 than reducing human emission of CO2.
I believe we would be far better off with direct charges or mandates vs identified 'externalities', and then let the different technologies fight it out, then the raft of confusing subsidies we currently have.
See:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/energy...m-unstoppable-solar-and-wind/?sh=7cffa6fe2c84
The 'levelized cost of energy' from wind and solar is _cheaper_ than natural gas if you ignore the energy storage issue. If you use wind and solar to power _dispatchable_ loads, and use conventional energy to power non-dispatchable loads, then we would have a reasonably stable grid, and people will quickly learn how to make more loads dispatchable since that gets you access to cheaper energy.
-Jon