Hey, Charon, what do you think of T. Boone's wind plan?
Think it will actually start anything rolling? Are his pockets deep enough?
I haven't really followed it all that much. When you hear wind, or solar or nuclear you are talking electrical generation. Now, unless you combine that with McCain's electric cars I don't see it (or the other solutions) much impacting gasoline or diesel prices. We don't generate much (I'm not sure if we generate any) electricity in the US using oil. It certainly could impact the natural gas price spike though.
Where motor fuels are concerned you have biofuels, coal-to-liquid, tar sands, oil/shale and deepwater. I believe ANWR is the last conventional/cheap oil opportunity of any note in the US -- and it's not all that much. For these alternatives (and the supply is plentiful) you are talking $40+ bbl oil at least to start making them viable. And by that, a fairly guaranteed $40-$60 and consistant floor on oil prices and not just a spike here or there, even if that spike lasts 5 years or so at a pop and comes around once a decade or so.
That's the deal about "peak oil" where the new crop of institutional speculation is concerned. The new financial players outside the industry seem to think these high prices are the norm, and are only going to increase in the future. Those in the industry itself remember oil at $10 to $15 per bbl less than a decade ago, have gone through these swings a number of times and don't seem to be all that sure the high prices are here to stay. If they were, the oil companies would be investing in alternative motor fuel technologies with no reservations and real dollars.
Charon