Drives me crazy that people are still pining away for some magic blue-light arc-reacor sci-fi energy source to save us when solar and wind are out there doing it, as we speak.

"If only we could generate energy cheaper than any fossil fuel, but free of carbon emissions!"

Uh.

And solar's not even close to done yet!

"MIT engineers have developed a scalable fabrication technique to produce paper-thin and lightweight solar cells that can quickly and easily turn any surface into a power source." https://pvbuzz.com/mit-produce-paper-thin-and-lightweight-fabric-solar-cells/?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

MIT develops a scalable manufacturing technique to produce paper-thin, lightweight fabric solar cells that can be stuck onto any surface

pvbuzz.com

The fusion discourse is extremely annoying, but it'll be gone again in a day or two, so let me just add two final notes to this.

First: no one, least of all me, is "against" fusion or fusion research. Research away! Yay for science.

Two: what bugs me is nothing about fusion itself but what I see as a very familiar kind of anti-politics. There's a craving for a deus ex machina that solves all problems & transforms everything without all the tedious arguing, fighting, & battling for every inch of ground.
This craving to bypass politics is understandable, but it's bad. Even if fusion proved viable tomorrow, there would still be politics. There would still be fights & disagreements & factionalism. It would still be a long battle to transform the energy system.
People want to transform energy without disrupting the basic systems of political power -- that's a big part of the impetus for "just slot nuke plants in for coal plants & call it a day." System justification is a powerful subconscious force.
https://www.volts.wtf/p/why-social-change-is-so-excruciatingly#details
Why social change is so excruciatingly difficult

When we look across the broad sweep of human history, what needs explaining is not times of rebellion and upheaval, but the much more common periods of unjust rule facing little resistance. Why do people so often internalize the ideologies upholding systems under which they suffer? Why do they fail to fight back? Psychologist John Jost has an answer. I talked it over with him.

Volts
China’s Climate Goals Hinge on a $440 Billion Nuclear Buildout

China is planning at least 150 new reactors in the next 15 years, more than the rest of the world has built in the past 35.

Bloomberg