I would not include biofuels in an 'All of the above' energy policy.
Biofuels are an net-negative value proposition for the following reasons:
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Nature has already produced 'biofuels' at zero cost to man. Man still needs to pay for exploration, development, transportation, storage, and refinement, but man does not have to pay for the process to convert organic material into 'fossil fuels'.
Again, that depends on how it is used... Used cooking oil collection and conversion might be a legitimate use. Just as an example of what I mean... Distributed resources are never a bad thing.
'Fossil fuels' are more more economical and less envrionmentally destructive than man-made 'biofuels'.
TRUE. And it will continue to be the main thing for at least another century. Admitted. But that still does not eliminate the use of a distributed model.
For instance, in mega cities, it may well be better to go electric. Considering the pollution level, and relatively short commutes, and an always available charging method, well maybe electric cars make sense like that.
In rural areas where grid electricity is not reliable, I already know that solar makes sense. Many places here it is so. My friend just put in a solar system to run his new house. It cost him 20% less than it would have to hook up to grid, and that's throwing in a fail-over diesel generator...
I am saying one shoe does not fit everyone, and distributed systems are often better, or even necessary.
Solar and Wind are immature and incomplete alternate energy technologies. They require the additional development of storage and a more dynamic eletric grid that has more near-real-time, on-demand generation capability. When the sun sets, and solar output decreases, a stable grid would require natural gas turbine generators to start automatically or power to be drawn from storage.
ONLY TRUE at the industrial level. Solar/batt or solar/batt/grid at home can be very reliable, especially in the north, and especially when using heat pump technology (because it costs little in power).
Batteries have come a long, long way, and are very capable of running a modest home. Now, that may be generator or grid power sometimes, when cloudy days prevent or limit solar gathering, so don't expect solar to ever be reliable.
But it doesn't have to be reliable at the end user. Its best use is augmentation.
Still, it is just barely able to compete with the grid, and often can't compete where the grid is strongest.
But in very rural areas and oddly subdivisions, where demand tied prices fluctuate through the day, solar becomes viable and even attractive..
I am not against your position exactly. Just pointing out that there is more than one way to skin a cat.