- Decreasing energy costs has the least political opposition and lowers the cost of living
- Democrats and Conservatives can get behind lowering cost of living without replacing jobs
- (i.e. deflation of costs by replacing human jobs with automation/AI may not have as much bipartisan support)
- It's relatively well-researched and executable to increase (1) solar energy and (2) nuclear energy
- These are coordination, markets, or political/regulatory problems, not research problems; therefore, it is a known known with very few known unknowns (and likely little unknown unknowns) - just scale up what is working
Lowering energy costs might have bipartisan support but the approaches to achieve them don't.
Energy prices is a well-treaded political issue that comes out at most elections. Everyone wants cheaper electricity but conservatives lean anti-wind and anti-solar and liberals lean anti-nuclear and anti-fossil fuel so there's a bit of an impasse.
Saying "lower energy costs has bipartisan support" is like saying "improving education outcomes" or "fixing healthcare" has bipartisan support. The disagreements and intractability are in the details.
Do you have a more specific idea for how you would use $1M to lower energy costs in way that would have bipartisan support?
That's a good point.
I'm not familiar with why Conservatives are anti-wind and anti-solar. What are these arguments?
Here's Grok: https://grok.com/share/bGVnYWN5_4a7c7d26-dd4f-4e4e-aaf3-3605d888de44
Producing more electrons is a known engineering problem; while education and healthcare are human problems, so I don't know if these are directly comparable.