You are right, I saw a nuclear power plant sprout off a tree on my way back from work the other day, and uranium and thorium were being sold for pennies in this economy.TeamKoolGreen wrote:This is a biblically wrong take, full stop.dialtone wrote: ↑03 Feb 2026, 21:21This might be a biblically wrong level take.Badger wrote: ↑03 Feb 2026, 21:07In reality this is stupid though, as renewable energy is expensive to produce and any energy that you spend on making "sustainable fuel" could probably be spent more efficiently on something else, something that doesn't require the conversion of electricity to fuel which is inherently energy inefficient.
If you replace the etanol corn fields in the US (about 30% of total corn fields) with solar panels you will make 85% more energy than the US needs daily, measured as using the efficiency of panels in the Chicago area, so quite north.
Solar panels are 97% glass, aluminum and silicon. The remaining 3% is lead and glue and probably other resins.
Solar power is practically unlimited, can easily be used to produce any fuel that F1 needs at the cheapest price of any source of electricity. It also doesn’t need to be active all the time, this isn’t providing energy to a country.
The closest thing we have to infinite energy is nuclear. Not solar. Solar panels have to be manufactured , installed and maintained and do not have an infinite service life.
There is a reason big oil loves putting money into solar and wind. Because these methods don't have a hope in replacing true energy baseload. Only nuclear does.
LMAO. Are we not all engineers here?

