I guess its just a sudden topic of interest now....alternative energy. It used to coem and go in the news, depending on whether that had any other stories that took presidence. Plus of course, now that the US has done a complete U-Turn on the subject, now wanting to lead the world in combatting carbon emissions rather than telling everyone it's all good and justifying their '24%' of the worlds pollution they produce. Thiings like this are bound to crop up.
Remember about 12 years ago (I was 12 at the time..) they found a way to increase the efficiency of cheap solar cells, by layering them so each layer absorbs a small ammount tof the UV? That was meant to provide double the efficiency of the expensive cells, but at 30% of the cost. They said that would change the world too, and yet even today, you can only get either the dirt cheap ones, or the ultra expensive 'very efficient' ones.
As for Nuclear energy, its still really the only viable option for cutting carbon emmisions significantly...unless we somehow get people to stop being so utterly wasteful (not going to happen). But who said it was cheap? Maybe the government and power companies don't want the public to know just how much their bills are gonna rise...but if it goes ahead, they will, after all, nuclear power is woefully inefficient.
The whole process of nuclear energy hasn't changed in 50 years, just like cars, old technology with new marketting, or...some radical new idea, that gets to the media and news long before any actual 'tests' are done, purely because editors, writers, and the fickle public love the idea.
I sincerely hope that a group of (educated) people are attempting to tackle this problem somewhere, rather than saying 'windmill farms will solve everything!' whenever the press ask for some data.
Well, I'm cynical, but I'll blieve that solar power will become a viable option when I see it, right now, its too expensive, and will always require a big fat inverter. Flexible, and even fabric photovoltaic cells have been around for years too, and they've yet to take off. Is it the realisation of the true costs? The over stated claims in the media? Or simply the public not wanting to ruin their cheap mock-up houses with solar cells? who knows.
Rant over.
Blueteeth