jonathan rowe;293273 wrote:
I agree, investment wise stick to the wheat
But, that doesn't mean the state shouldn't be investing in research and prototypes and perhaps even pump-priming demand for tech when it's demonstrably a benefit but too expensive (ie. domestic solar scheme, green subsidy, CFD bids for renewable projects)
It means
exactly that the state should not be wasting money on dead end research...
But that requires unbiased assessment of a technology and the chances of it ever succeeding. But trying to find such people is quite hard, so politicians shrug and give grants out.
There are plenty of things that money was poured into that finally, after millions spent, quietly died a death.
A great example was magnetic levitation railways in the 70's.
Someone has to decide, and being like a model parent have the ability to say "no".
The classic current one (pun intended) is fusion. It's just a money pit of research money with zero chance of ever providing anything useful.
EV's have been going for what, ten years now? And they are still expensive and an ownership nightmare. Because despite weekly claims of "new battery tech" with xxx miles range and ten minute recharge (or whatever) it just doesn't and won't happen.
The government are almost getting the message. Insurance companies and fire brigades are in the know, but someone has to put their hands up and call it. Instead they just kick it down the road by five years (so far). That "pump priming" of subsidy just didn't work. Reality kicks in and the EV things is staggering towards the edge.