It is not like we can build a 100,000 wind generators overnight either. And that's how many would be needed to put a small dent in the US grid.
We need all sorts of power: solar, geothermal, wind, nuclear, coal if all the world is going to come close to surviving the next 50 years without severe issues. All oil and natural gas should be reserved for transportation and space heating.
As far as global warming, CO2 capture needs to be advanced and quickly. But I think we are way over the hump on this and will see real problems.
Let's imagine what's feasible. Germany is putting in 100 turbines monthly, averaging about 2 MW each. The population of the US is almost four-fold. More importantly the US has more land mass and much better winds. So at least 10,000 MW annually and maybe double that should be possible in a few years. Of course, that's not a steady 10,000 MW. It would probably average out at something like a quarter of that. So let's say 2,500 MW - 5,000 MW. Hmmm. That's pathetic. California's peak demand alone goes into the 50,000's. Over 20 years we get 50,000-100,000 MW. Over 30 we get 75,000-150,000. I suspect the higher end. Technology can only improve. That's only the demand from a few states. And while conservation will go a long way, we'll probably also be electrifying transportation.
We'd have to do something way more dramatic than Germany. Make wind a national priority. Convert existing factories to turbine making. I'm not advocating this, though something of the sort may eventually be done anyway. 3-6 nuclear plants a year is starting to look awfully tempting, I'll admit.
I foresee solar PV making a similar small contribution to peak. I see a bigger role for solar thermal. Throw in some biomass. I have no idea how much there is. You have to be really careful about it anyway, because you can make soil productivity go up in smoke. And soil productivity is going to be a big priority. I know biomass is significant, but I don't know how to assess it. Cogen is out there. Geothermal.
Coal? We need coal?
I guess that's what David Hughes says too. He says we need it all. He's confident that coal will never replace the decline in oil and natural gas anyway. How do you feel about generation from natural gas using cogen in areas where supply is not an issue for the foreseeable future? Can't agree with you on coal. We need to be getting rid of it as fast as we can. That's the point.
Carbon sequestration. Well, we need to stop wasting our time. That may be another pipe dream. It's been the rationale behind maintaining coal. I've been annoyed with energy planners in Ontario that basically use it as a lie to support continued use of coal. Because even a cursory review indicates that power plants built to burn coal conventionally are in no way equipped to sequester it. You need the proper siting to begin with. It's a lot more complicated and expensive to build a coal plant capable of sequestration. Sequestration reduces the efficiency of coal generation, too, so you burn even more. And you never capture it all.
I've seen one compelling opinion suggesting we need to fund one study intensely to look at the potential of sequestration at one study site and pull the plug on funding of coal in every other case. And yesterday, one analyst said that the sequestration sites in China are completely dwarfed by the immense lignite deposits. So it's not going to be a panacea either.
If it turns out, as is becoming increasingly likely, that we'll be driven to attempt to pull carbon out of the living environment to sequester it, we will feel a little stupid if all the sequestration sites are saturated with coal that we thought we could burn because it was safely sequestered.
As an engineer friend of mine put it, the absolutely cheapest form of sequestration is to keep it in the ground in the first place. And by that, he includes all the costs of more expensive energy/conservation or whatever to reduce the need. He has never encountered a case where this wasn't obvious at first glance.