Nah. Natural gas- fracked now and from biological sources in the future- is the bridge to the future.
We still build wind. We still build solar.
Fuel cells running on natural gas in the homes, malls, offices and factories will be the electrical generation system of choice in the not so distant future. No transmission losses, twice as efficient in terms of BTU per watt vs current coal fired methods, smaller carbon footprint with the potential of becoming zero net if it's biogas sourced, and not poisonous for twenty thousand generations of humanity!
Why is this the bridge? Because the future is hydrogen. The same infrastructure that handles natural gas now could, with very little alteration, handle hydrogen.
Really, the only advantage hydrogen has is that it doesn't create carbon dioxide as a byproduct of combustion or fuel cell use. That's not always desirable; I can think of lots of ways to put pure co2 to good use around here!
Nuclear = expensive, dangerous forever poison.
Natural gas = bridge to an efficient, distributed power future.
I'm afraid you haven't thought these through according to the numbers. Rotting waste isn't ever going to come close to powering anything really. But ya grab it up where applicable every bit helps.
Natural gas and hydrogen, you have left out the economics of them vs nuclear. Quality of life for poorer people and what they can comfortably afford for energy are important as is mortality rate. These deaths are almost exclusively regular working class folks as well. As you transition to Natural Gas then Hydrogen, you are right in that your infrastructure transition costs would be minimal. Not to to be confused with costs of expanding that infrastructure for the new very large demand for Natural Gas though, the demand would be the cost kicker largely though.
Producing hydrogen is crazy expensive, you sound a little Bushy in your prediction that hydrogen is a great target of the immediate future, how long has it been since he said that like 16 years? And where's the hydrogen, you have two choices:
1. You believe those youtube vids where the hydrogen car ran on water and the inventor was killed or shunned from science.
2. It's not economically viable.
You should have typed
Natural Gas= expensive, dangerous.
Nuclear= safe and affordable.
Do you have any info on how much one kwH costs with gas? Include the bio farts I would love to know that number.
Meanwhile, your gas mortality rate per
trillion kwH yearly would climb dramatically from where it is now at 4000 per unit.
Biogas is a staggering
24,000.
Nuclear is staying around 10cents per kwH right there with Gas but the mortality rate is 0.01 per trillion kwH.
IDK, frack that shit if you think it's going to drop below 10cents per kwH, I seriously doubt it will though.