That reminds me of a terrible schoolboy joke about books with silly titles - "Mud on the windows" by Hu Flung Dung
The trouble is that once politics gets involved in an issue we're one step removed from ideology, the arguments get polarised.
So lets lob some pragmatic ideas in to disrupt the "nuclear is evil", "no you're evil", "think of the children!" debate....
1 - Use less energy. You see I have a magic way to create energy equivalent to 10,000 new homes. Demolish 20,000 houses from the last century, then rebuild them with this wacky stuff called insulation so they use half the energy to keep warm. All the houses in this picture will have solid brick walls with no insulation. When I moved from a terrace like that to a new detached house with 50% more floor area (ie more than doubling the exposed surface) , my heating bills went down by 30%. So halving the energy should be a doddle for a terrace of the same size.
Actually, halving the energy is silly, the target should be 20%, ie 80% less. That's generous bearing in mind passivhouse is now achievable (although not in all areas, I'll save that rant for another time).
They'd be nicer to live in and worth more, so the resale book value combined with lifetime energy savings will pay for the construction.
2 - Reduce the losses getting that energy to your door - less centralised power, more urban CHP, electric cars as short term storage to smooth diurnal demand.
3 - Have a balanced energy mix - as far as current technology goes that means a mix of dirty and clean supplies for the next few decades.
4 - Mandate CHP for all domestic developments more than 25 houses - its cheaper than each house burning gas and electricity.
6 - Use the furnace that is constantly running beneath our feet. Why are we burning gas to heat our homes when there's hot water in the ground below my feet? Community heating would make this worthwhile.
7 - Utilise that great big generator that circles the earth. Some people call it the moon, I see it as a huuuuuge flywheel stuffed with idle potential energy . It's as regular as clockwork, unaffected by weather.
Now lets think of the engineering of these issues, not the politics.