I don't find those developers of high-tech electronic equipment and
handheld digital devices the prime innovators of the modern age. This is because they just don't have any damn plans of making their gadgets cost-effective and efficient when it comes to energy consumption! Yes, they have all these ways and means in which to reduce the cost of either information access or digital communications, but they should concentrate more on the energy sources to tap in using those gizmos. Imagine a time when we all have those gizmos and yet do not have enough energy resources to power them all up!
The people who need to be applauded and supported are those instigators of various ways and means to produce replenishable energy sources. One such man is
John Craven, and his plans for the world are indeed ambitious, but generally possible. Cold fusion has been a most talked-about process of generating unlimited and replenishable electrical energy, but I think even Einstein couldn't turn this idea into a working system back then, or he wasn't just getting enough support from the government. With free unlimited electrical energy, actual control over the people would be hard to come by!
John Craven thinks that he could even tap this system so as to produce fresh water and continuous air conditioning aside from a replenishable supply of electrical energy. The system makes use of the extremely cold water found way below the ocean basin depths. John Craven's idea is that by continuously pumping the extremely cold water upwards, electrical energy, fresh water, and free, not to mention continuous, air conditioning would then be produced. The temperature ranges of the actual cold water to be pumped and what we have up here have so much difference that it would generally create electrical energy when continuously processed through this system. Plus, doing this would cause the water being pumped to provide a replenishable supply of fresh water, and the steam could generally provide free and continuous air conditioning. John Craven has made the necessary plans so as to start this immense project of his, and it shows -- he has chosen a certain cluster of islands in the Caribbean to first test out his brainchild. I think this is very good since the open waters are the largest solar containers we have on the planet!