That's exactly what I meant about round the clock/peak generation. A nation could theoretical go, say, all nuclear or all coal, but it would be a pointless misuse of potential, different techniques are good at providing different things in different ways and we should obviously be taking advantage of that. To clarify, I'd like to see more nuclear power stations built and as well as more *insert appropriate renewable source for you local here* as older stations come offline (be they coal, gas or whatever). I'm not calling for 500 hundred new nuclear stations or anything like that. Just to be even more clear, because after your post I've been worried that I'm not explaining myself very well, I'll use a (not very good) analogy. If we were living in the 15th century and were discussing these damn matchlocks everyone seems to have started using, the equivalent of my position on power would be "we should make more guns, gunpowder and ammunition" as opposed to "throw away all your bows and arballasts right now! We need to make guns!" And I realise that fusion has been 50 years away for 50 years, it's just my personal conservative estimate. Who knows, it could turn out that its impossible to get profitable fusion (in the sense of how much power you can get out of it) with the materials humans are capable of producing. But part of me wants to live to see a world where we can harness artificial sunfire for peaceful purposes.
To clarify my critique, we already have baseload capacity in excess. About 100% surplus of our needs IIRC. When we build more power plants, we are building for our peak needs, not our baseload needs. And given how enormously difficult it is to restart a power plant in the day if you shut it off at night, it's not like the nuclear can provide the baseload while leaving the coal to take the peak. So if you say you favor building nuclear for our baseload needs you are favoring either:
A) replacing existing capacity outright (very expensive!)
B) wait until we have baseload needs above our peak need (i.e. when half our energy is solar, a very long time )
C) building for peak needs now and use that capacity for baseload need in the future when existing baseload becomes expensive to maintain and/or baseload needs grow beyond our current capacity (30+ years)
So while nuclear is a very good source for baseload capacity, we don't actually need any baseload capacity now and won't for a while. By the time we actually do need nuclear I suspect it's going to be obsolete. Moore's law coupled with high voltage power transmission means that solar power could render it obsolete in a couple decades but I suspect there will probably be a cheaper answer then that by the time we actually need the baseload capacity.
None of this actually factors in market inefficiencies and government subsidies though. Nuclear energy could become profitable to build this decade if the government subsidizes construction, as countless legislators seem inclined to do. It seems like the "centrist" approach though IMHO centrist is a synonym for "bad" when it comes to energy.
Ah, I assume that when your talking about baseload capacity currently available, you mean specifically in the US (from your avatar and profile I'm gonna assume you are an American)? I'm from the UK, and without going into some hard statistics, we have a slightly different distribution of power types than
our break away child country grown monstrously powerful once free of our clutches the US. Basically, even with all the massive government sponsored wind turbine building going on over here, we are still very over dependent on imported natural gas (stupid 90's economic forces, cheap gas put us in a real tricky spot). We do have some nuclear facilities (16, currently, with a few in the tortuously complex planing stages), but nearly all of these are either small, ready to be decommissioned or should have been decommissioned 20 years ago. Hell, we even import power generated by a nuclear station in
France. What I'm really trying to say here is that I favor a broad range of options for power and want to move away from fossil fuels (which will only get more expensive with time) as much as possible. I fully realise that these are big, long term things. Hell, we (that's a UK we, as opposed to a humanity we) have coal reserves to last for 200-300 years, even taking into account predicted population growth. But, very expensive carbon capture or no, I don't think anyone is suggesting more (conventional) coal plants as a recipe for a Brighter Future, but its nice to know that the option is there.
At the end of the day, these are huge, complex issues with countless facets. As you said, none of this real deals with government involvement/subsides in choices about what types of power we use, let alone the
politics of the damn thing. Complex, but fun to discuss.
Ps I've enjoyed reading your posts, always nice to have a bit of back and forth with someone who obviously really knows what they're talking about, as oppossed to me, who just has a keen interest in the subject.