- David Fuchs
- Lakehurst, NJ
- United States
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Is solving the world energy problems at $10 per Mwh a moral issue?
If you know you will destroy governments reliant on fossil fuels for funding, cause the failure of nations, destroy most pension systems due to their reliance on carbon investments, cause deflationary pressure on every nation worldwide, and cause people to lose their life savings.
Would you release the technology to do $10-$20 per Mwh energy?
Is it morally right with the damage it will do?
>>>> Reply to all. This issue is closed. The next issue is a question as to if this is actually a device that can do sub $20 per Mwh energy.
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Barry Palmer 50+
IMO, it is a moral issue, but for exactly the opposite reasons. The benefits of cheap energy, to the poorest of the world, would be enormous. So Yes, we have a moral obligation to pursue sustainable cheap energy.
David Fuchs
A sizable portion of the costs of all goods, manufactured and grown is energy. The energy costs for "things" go from 20% to 80% depending on how many levels of manufacturing, shipping, refrigeration, and number of employees that are involved. Removing or reducing the cost of energy by 90% would cause a huge worldwide deflationary economic event.
Throwing in the failure of every nation running a deficit, is it still morally right to release this technology?
Krisztián Pintér 200+
David Fuchs
Perhaps I should have asked if it was ethical rather than moral.
Krisztián Pintér 200+
let's say the price of everything goes down. why would that matter? even if tax revenue goes down, it hurts nobody, since everything is cheaper. the smaller sum of money still buys you more than previously. so where is the problem exactly?
David Fuchs
Take existing home sales -vs- new home sales. When you have a substantial reduction in the cost of manufactured goods, nails, lumber, wire, plumbing, etc lets call it a 40% reduction in cost. Existing home prices will be way outside what the market will bear when a new house, almost twice the size, can be bought at the same price.
Writing that I realized something very simple. This will not be an instantaneous reduction in the cost of energy, it will occur over several years allowing markets to adapt. So I guess you are right. There really is no problem with energy at $10 per Mwh.
Krisztián Pintér 200+
David Fuchs
Krisztián Pintér 200+
David Fuchs
The question has been answered, I will be closing this question in a day or two.