You're talking about current technology.
Based on that argument, we should still be using 286 computers with floppy or 10 meg hard drives connecting to the internet on 1200 Baud modems.
No I'm not being sarcastic, I'm simply arguing that things change. What's current today won't be current tomorrow and if we never explore and test and try we'll be saddled with oil until we go into the dustbin of history.
There ARE ways of getting hydrogen cheaper.
We just haven't discovered them yet.
I'm talking about thermodynamics.
There ARE ways of getting hydrogen cheaper.
I wasn't talking about price, I was talking about energy.