Christian,
You do have a point there.
We need something to replace coal and oil, and at the moment renewable energy does not look promising for core electricity production. It clearly needs more research , which the Danish government have cut back on.

Actually going full ahead with solar cells in Germany looks a bit premature considering it lack of efficiency and the German weather.
The problem with renewables is that they are pretty much useless when it comes to continuous, reliable and demand-fitting production of electricity and energy. They makes sense only in very little niches, and otherwise can at best augment conventional power generation.
This is simply because of the massive amount of space they require. Just building windmills, PV, etc. is not enough, by far not enough. You also need huge amounts of really big storage systems. But the more storage you need, the more excess capacity of renewables you have to install, just to maintain the storage systems at a proper level and to compensate for losses in the system.
Then you have to connect all that together, or install even more renewables and storage systems the more localized you want to get. For example, quite often we have a week without wind, followed by a day or two with moderate wind, again followed by a week without wind. And that even in the winter. That means that the storage would have to provide energy for at least one week, and the whole system must be able to recharge the storage in a day or two. Just do the math ....
The other method is to install and maintain a whole fleet of conventional power plants just for stand-by. That would mean massive amounts of money spent for renewables, storage and grid, plus a lot of money going into maintainance os the standby plants. Which makes them a huge money sink.
If you live in, or close to, the desert or another very sunny place, solar makes some sense. If you have huge areas of wasteland with a more-or-less constant wind, or shorelines with the same, then windmills make sense. But such places are the exception and not the norm.
I am 100% confident that if renewables would not get the insane amount of subsidies they get here in Germany, no one would ever think about putting PV panels on their roofs, or building huge windfarms, etc. They "work" only because of that massive subsidization. They would never, ever stand a chance on the open market on their own.
So the only real alternatives are continuing to burn through our fossil fuels, or to get modern reactor technology up and running. And i'm sure that we can agree that burning through all our fossil fuels surely is not the best way...
Greetings,
Chris