Did you ask the Americans if they are willing to pay over 30cents US per Kw/hr to subsidize wind and solar ? Kw/hr per capita in Portugal is also lower than American consumption.
How many US citizens have the time, money, expertise and the type of residence to use solar heating in winter ? The solar panels across the road from my house spend days at a time covered with snow, a problem that Portugal does not have. Portugal is also a small country with a high population density. Power transmission lines from phoenix arizona solar to new york loads of 2400 miles distance is not a consideration.
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B&D, Why did you go on the attack and raise issues I never mentioned? I came on here to offer some information to the OP who had requested it. I most certainly did not attack you. In fact I said that like yourself I want to know that an idea I had will work in accordance with the Laws of Physics. You surely cannot condemn me for agreeing with you? Where I might disagree is about the use of nuclear. Not because I think it is inherently unsafe or bad, but because (again as you yourself have pointed out in relation to Fukishima) stupid people do stupid things and problems happen. Additionally cases of failure to properly maintain happen from time to time. If something goes wrong with other power generation there is much less damage and it is easier fixed. Although, having seen a report some time ago about the state of some of the dams holding back water in the US I think one of those failing would be quite a catastrophe - but yet again human failure to do something before it happens would be the cause.
I never suggested that US taxpayers should subsidise any system - although as you and I and everyone else knows, many industries are subsidised. Renewable energy should stand alone unsubsidised, but governments tend to want to interfere in all aspects of life, and some choose to subsidise various industries, including renewables. The UK has seen the folly of this and is seriously curtailing these subsidised schemes. I think I am right in saying that Portugal does not subsidise individual personal projects, although it did at one time.
So far as building a solar heating system for personal use is concerned, just have a look at the links I gave and see how simple and cheap it can be. Especially look for the Canadian solar users. An initial experiment is to make (or use an existing) box, paint it black inside, take a duct out of the top and feed the hot air into your house through a window; blanking off the rest of the opened part of course. Or even simpler, just feel the heat coming out of the top. Obviously those living in high rise flats cannot do this, but there are many millions of people living in houses that sit on the ground.
If your neighbour's solar panels are covered in snow, then the occupants of the house obviously do not know what they are doing. If cleared of snow, the reflection from the snow covered ground actually improves the solar gain. As it happens here in Portugal the snow fields and ski lifts are about 40 miles from me.
Population density is not the end of whether a country is overcrowded or not. Like Australia, the majority of Portugal's residents live close to the coast, and the inland rural areas are quite sparsely populated, but obviously not to the same extent as Australia and N America. Why attempt to transport solar power from Phoenix to New York? Have you ever heard of anyone suggesting it? It seems like a hare-brained idea to me. If solar power is decided to be used for New York, then the obvious answer is to build the solar collectors closer. You will have noted that despite having an extremely sunny climate, there is very little use of solar power in Portugal for electricity generation. I think, but do not know, that a lot of what is produced is from small scale projects feeding back into the grid. Solar power is used of course for heating domestic hot water systems - an ideal use of solar power, and one that is used for blocks of high rise flats. Almost any house can have such a system, and the payback is satisfactory. You do need to have the cash to lay out in the first place, or the borrowing power, but that applies to anything you want to buy.
I have read many hundreds of your posts since I joined TBN about a year after you, and I have enjoyed reading most of them, also learned a few things from you, so I feel I can suggest that perhaps you should have an open mind on the possibility that some renewable energy schemes can be successful and can be profitable without being subsidised. Please take the time to have a look at some of the schemes which have been done by individuals and ask them directly about any questions you have.