As rediculous as it sounds, Cuba could very easily overtake the U.S. in its use of alternative forms of energy. Why? Because like China they have a planned economy.
http://peakoil.com/alternative-energy/cuba-on-the-road-to-clean-energy-development/
Cuba on the Road to Clean Energy Development
More than a decade ago, solar electricity changed the lives  of several mountain communities in Cuba. Now this and other renewable  power sources are emerging as the best options available to develop  sustainable energy across the island.
“If the world’s clean energy potential exceeds our consumption needs,  why do we insist on using the polluting kind?” asked Luis Bérriz, head  of the Cuban Society for the Promotion of Renewable Energy Sources and  Respect for the Environment (CUBASOLAR), a non- governmental  organisation that promotes the use of alternative and  environmentally-friendly power sources.
According to his calculations, the amount of solar radiation Cuba receives is equivalent to 50 million tonnes of oil a day.
“If we covered the 1,000-kilometre-long national highway with solar  panels we would generate all the power currently used, without using  fossil fuels or occupying a single square metre of agricultural land,”  Bérriz said to IPS in an interview.
Moreover, “nobody can block the sun; it belongs to all of us,” he added.
Bérriz is a researcher and long-time advocate of renewable power  sources who prefers to talk about “reversing” climate change – which he  says is caused by “the destructive actions of today’s societies” –  instead of “adapting” to it.
In his opinion, adapting to what others destroy sounds more like  “conformism”. Industrialised countries are responsible for 75 percent of  all anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, which cause global  warming. The leading GHG is carbon dioxide (CO2).
For Bérriz, the best course of action is to move from oil to clean  energy sources, which exceed power needs. The way to do this is to  develop the knowledge, technology and industry necessary to tap into the  various renewable energy sources most available in each area, he says.
Key components of this process, Bérriz argues, are the training of  scientists, technicians and skilled workers to cover human resource  needs, and the creation of an energy and environmental culture that will  raise the awareness essential for the development of solar power based  on “fairness and solidarity”.
 
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It’s a big article, so go there and read. More tomorrow.
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