I am thinking you are confusing solar plants with solar panels. Solar plants use steam driven generators. The plant in the Mojave is a working plant powering a small town nearby. I drove through there a couple of years ago.
They use a battery backup to store excess electricity when they need it. The residual heat in the heat exchanger can convert water to steam for several hours after Sun set.
You want to turn a blind eye to it, fine, but openly dismissing a working plant is not going to convince anyone you are right.
I never said solar was a solution. I was commenting on the inaccuracy of your statement how solar plants could not generate enough electricity to power a light bulb.
It was hyperbole, first of all. (I'm also really uninterested in convincing anyone. That's not my job and I've long gotten over the futility of even trying.
Besides, I'm still trying to figure out fact from fiction myself, and that's a process, not a destination requiring a skeptical eye toward EVERYTHING. I'll lead them to the water and they may drink it if they wish or tell me they think it's poisoned. That's up to them.)
"PV [photo-voltaic] solar panels convert solar energy to electrical energy at an efficiency factor of about 15%. Thus, our panel [one square meter in size], at the equator, year-round, should deliver 25.5 watts of electrical energy – one very dim light bulb."Secondly, I highly doubt this plant powers an entire town but let's say it does... What's the cost? This is not a market-driven solution. This is a highly subsidized endeavor where you are spending $500 to save $40.
You made precisely my point, btw, on batteries. We have nowhere near the battery technology to make this stuff even remotely efficient. Pie in the sky dreams of solar power replacing oil are just that. Dreams. It's not a global solution for energy, and I seriously doubt it ever will be. Regionally, of limited use or to augment the grid? Sure. If they can ever figure out how to tie it in efficiently. We are a long way from that.
This lays it out far better than I can.
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2014/07/five_fatal_flaws_of_solar_energy.htmlI think solar has its place, but it's not the panacea we're being promised. I say let's use everything but only as technology permits. I'm not going to put solar panels on my house when the break-even is 18 years under perfect conditions. It's stupid to do that. Let the technology improve then we'll talk.