Just a thought - nuclear power provides electricity, and what we're short of is liquid fuels and natural gas.
Yes, we can use vehicles running on batteries or hydrogen, but there are several problems:
- to replace the energy currently used in transport in the UK we would have to increase our electricity supply by something like four times
- over the next 10-15 years we're going to be struggling to keep our existing electricity generation capacity, with nuclear stations reaching the end of their lives, coal plants shutting down due to the EU LCPB and North Sea gas declining fast
- it will take years to replace all our oil-fuelled transport with electric, and doing so will cause a massive rise in the prices of the raw materials (i.e. catalysts or battery chemicals)
- the infrastructure for charging batteries or supplying hydrogen will also take years to build
There's also problems like the efficiency of using hydrogen - from power station to traction, the efficiency can end up being 50% or lower, requiring even more power stations to be built. And all this is before we start to think about the practicalities of moving hydrogen around, whether fuel cells are up to the job physically, and whether there's enough platinum and other exotic elements available.
I'm not saying we shouldn't have electric cars, hydrogen fuel and nuclear power - these can all play a part in mitigating peak oil, but they will not provide the same amount of energy or convenience of use. We will be forced to reduce transport use - going slower and not as far. Electric bikes help here, but moving goods is the killer - hence the need to re-localise food production, etc.
And remember we still have that issue of making fertiliser from natural gas...
Oh, and aeroplanes need oil-based fuels. Biofuels freeze at high altitude, and hydrogen is too bulky, so we're going to be flying a lot less in future.
But this isn't all doom and gloom - I think we will probably be a happier society if we lead less hectic lives and are more involved with the people we actually live near. As has been pointed out, endlessly chasing economic growth will have to stop, but from the point of view of people's happiness and the survival of the environment that's a good thing.
The key point is that these changes are going to happen anyway - there isn't an endless supply of oil, gas, phosphorous, iron, copper, etc. The choice we have is this:
- Do we plan ahead and start changing our way of life and national infrastructure to be ready for what's coming (and there is not much time left to do this...)
- Or do we just sit and wait, and leave it to "natural process" like famine, poverty, disease and war to bring the numerical size and way of life of our species back in line with what the planet can actually support long term.
I realise discussions like this are maybe a bit big and off-topic to have here, another place to go is the
PowerSwitch forum, where this kind of stuff is discussed in much more detail.