Nuclear is a carbon free renewable.
So, in the US, carbon-based fuels provide ~60% of our energy, not 80%, as you erroneously stated.
Good of you to admit it.
The fact remains no matter what part of the world you are in we need more Natural gas and other carbon fuels, plus nuclear, to meet growing demand. Solar and Wind are no longer viable.
It's as if you blew right past all those countries that are increasingly
less dependent upon the carbon fuels.
Solar is
more viable than it has ever been, with increasingly efficient solar cells and spreading capability.
Whatever weed you are smoking, you should taper off. Or, if you are relying on your energy stocks and fretful of their term utility, relax. EM in the early first year of six a $15 billion investment in lower greenhouse gas emission initiatives. Shell picked up almost half of Silicon Ranch a while ago and all of Savion last year, in addition to expanding their own sustainable energy capacity. BP picked up 7X Energy last summer.
You and your share of the troglodyte wing of the GOP seem to be the only ones who believe "solar ... is no longer viable."
Wind? Other than yours, McConnell's, McCarthy's and the MAGA-ites, opinions on this run in opposition, as well. Everybody's in on wind investment, too.
Part of how to reduce the vulnerability to heat wave induced wind reduction would be to have a network that is not isolated from the rest of the grid.
I listed
a few of the countries in which more than 40% of their energy is coming from renewables. Their percentage has been increasing. I guess, according to you, they are not "part of the world."
"There is a growing mismatch between societal demands for action on climate change and the actual pace of progress, with energy demand and carbon emissions growing at their fastest rate for years. The world is on an unsustainable path."
~ Spencer Dale, BP chief economist, 2019.
Which is why the big oil companies are working to shift to sustainable energy production as fast as they can and so are most developed countries' governments.