@Shimbiris
There were a lot of Africans in the UAE when I was there last month, ton of Ethiopians especially.
There were a lot of Africans in the UAE when I was there last month, ton of Ethiopians especially.
Nothing about what I said was pessimistic because I don't ascribe value judgments based on the realistic readings. Innovations will occur if Allah wills, but as things stand today, that is not going to change with whatever these guys have cooked up. The only ambitious leap on this is fusion. They can only run those experiments for seconds, and they're intensive, not net energy drivers. I'm optimistic.
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I don't know howe they could force their native pouplation to work. The people have gotten used to decades of living this way. A high skilled labor pool requires a competitive society . Look at east asia . There's nothing you could do to motivate a large chunk of the native pouplation to work 40+ hours a week.
You can be very immature at times.Maybe pessimistic is not quite the word, rather overly rigid and dismissive of technological progress.
The global transitioning is already happening. Africa's energy demand is rising, but that does not mean oil is the only solution.
Plus many African countries lack refining capacity, importing refined oil is expensive. Most new power plants being built in Africa are renewable, not oil-based.
While fusion is not yet a viable solution, it is not the only innovation happening in energy. Battery technology is advancing, energy efficiency is improving, and storage solutions are evolving. The cost of solar and wind energy has dropped dramatically, making them more competitive.
Energy transitions are not "wishful thinking" scenarios they are driven by necessity and technological progress.