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Michio Kaku on the Solar Revolution | Big Think

Big Think | April 14, 2026



Michio Kaku on the Solar Revolution
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Michio Kaku: I believe in solar power, but there are problems that we have to face, and one of them is low efficiency.
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MICHIO KAKU:

Dr. Michio Kaku is the co-founder of string field theory, and is one of the most widely recognized scientists in the world today. He has written 4 New York Times Best Sellers, is the science correspondent for CBS This Morning and has hosted numerous science specials for BBC-TV, the Discovery/Science Channel. His radio show broadcasts to 100 radio stations every week. Dr. Kaku holds the Henry Semat Chair and Professorship in theoretical physics at the City College of New York (CUNY), where he has taught for over 25 years. He has also been a visiting professor at the Institute for Advanced Study as well as New York University (NYU).
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TRANSCRIPT:

Michio Kaku: Some people think that the time is right for the solar revolution, that one day solar power will replace oil and we’ll all live in a world that is clean and renewable. Well, not so fast. I believe in solar power. However, there are problems that we have to face, and one of them is low efficiency. The other one is lack of a storage facility like a battery. That’s’ the weak link. We simply don’t have the efficiency of solar cells necessary to make it economical and competitive today, and the ability to store the energy for long periods of time when the sun is dark, when there are clouds and your solar panels don’t work.

So my point of view is this: I think in the coming decade, as oil prices start to rise and as the cost of wind and solar and renewables start to drop, the two currents will probably cross in maybe ten years. So in ten years it will be the marketplace which then begins to drive the whole thing forward because of the dropping cost of solar cells and rising efficiency and the rising price of oil.

Now, why do I believe that oil prices will rise? Because of something called Hubbert’s Peak. Hubbert was a Shell Oil engineer way back in the 1960s who predicted that we would hit the halfway point for the production of oil in the United States and after that the bell-shaped curve would curve the other way and we would become an importer of oil.

Well, people laughed at him because they said that, “Well, wait a minute. We have Alaska. We have Texas. We have lots of oil fields, and so we’re not going to hit the 50% point. America will always export oil.” Well, wrong. Hubbert hit it right on the nose to within the year at which US oil supplies peaked and then it went to the other side of the bell-shaped curve. That’s called Hubbert’s Peak, when we hit the 50% point.

Now we know that Hubbard was right and the next big question is, are we hitting Hubbert’s Peak for world oil production? That is the $64,000 question. Many people that I’ve talked to, senior oil analysts, energy analysts, say that we are either at Hubbert’s Peak or within ten years of hitting Hubbert’s Peak. Now some people say, “Well that’s stupid. We discover new oil deposits all the time. Look at Canada. We have tar sands of Canada, right?” Wrong. It turns out that we will always have oil. We will never run out of oil, except oil will become more expensive as we go down the other side of Hubbert’s Peak. We would have to discover a new Saudi Arabia every five to ten years in order for this curve to simply go on forever. That’s not going to happen. I don’t care how many tar sands you’re talking about in Canada. You’re not going to create a new Saudi Arabia, which produces very clean, very cheap oil, oil that is prized by the oil companies because it is relatively less polluting and has tremendous amounts of profits associated with it.

So we do know that oil prices will fluctuate because of politics, but on average it will start to rise because we will be hitting Hubbert’s Peak. Meanwhile, solar power is going to become cheaper and in 10 years or so the two curves could actually cross, and in 20 years a new game changer arrives and that is fusion power. The Europeans are betting the store on the ITER fusion reactor to be built outside Cadarache, France in Southern France, and if we have the power of the sun on the earth then sea water could drive all our machines.

So if this scenario plays out as I predict, it means that global warming could actually be a problem only for the next several decades…

Read the full transcript at https://bigthink.com/videos/solar-revolution

Written by Big Think

Comments

This post currently has 43 comments.

  1. @sasikantht1658

    April 14, 2026 at 5:55 pm

    I am watching this video after 10 years, and yes, I am taking a new home with solar panels installed on the terrace, as it's much cheaper and efficient than it's been in the past decade. He predicted it well.

  2. @anikettripathi7991

    April 14, 2026 at 5:55 pm

    Unless we choose to keep energies storages beyond battaries, pollution and environmental issues are unstoppable. So ocean waves are sustainable solutions. Solar powers can be associated without battaries. Carbon dioxide is only one component of pollution.

  3. @TheGreatSeraphim

    April 14, 2026 at 5:55 pm

    Fusion power has been 20 years away for over 50 years. Its still 20 years away now and this video is 10 years old. They still can't even produce a reaction that lasts more than a minute. Not to mention they can't repeat it so its not a scientific result, they just got lucky or lied.

  4. @saosang2789

    April 14, 2026 at 5:55 pm

    Wow, his prediction 10 years ago about increasing gas price due to politics came true today. Solar power and fusion power still have yet to come to their peak productivity, after 1 decade. It would be great if Dr. Kaku continues to talk more about these energy issues now as the world is in crisis of oil and gas.

  5. @patrickfiorito

    April 14, 2026 at 5:55 pm

    Solar isn't even close to commercial ready and as a environment conciousness scientists. He should know this already. The amount of dangerous polluting forever chemicals made during the fabrication process is dangerous. And even worse for the environment.

  6. @thedecktothe16thpower56

    April 14, 2026 at 5:55 pm

    Dr. I have a concern about a possible up coming event when it comes to carbon in our atmosphere. It may work as an advantage to repel any projectiles that may seek to enter out atmosphere. I've watched a video on how this works already with a smaller comet.

  7. @jammil180

    April 14, 2026 at 5:56 pm

    Solar and batteries are looking much better than predicted. Tesla has succeeded in shooting the cannon across the bow of oil. 5 years max in my opinion until oil stocks have no place to go but green if they want to compete.

  8. @lepiota1074

    April 14, 2026 at 5:56 pm

    Very clear explained,a man that knows and a man that knows how to explain what he knows…but there's been 8 years since this video was made an solar Energy doesnt seem any Closer to gain momentum and replace the actual main sources of energy. Hope It happens soon!!

  9. @mkivy

    April 14, 2026 at 5:56 pm

    Thank you sir for the insight to an answer to the worlds continuing demise. You give us hope. I. 66 years old and did not dream I would ever live long enough to see such a mess we humans have made of this planet 🌏…we have so much work to do making the world livable for our children, grandchildren and my great grandchildren…I will be long gone but they need a good healthy planet to live on. Bless u sir. Stay well.

  10. @mikumikuiyada

    April 14, 2026 at 5:56 pm

    i dont think fusion power will work. Waaay before we find fusion power, solar and batteries will be so cheap, it will be cheaper than cost of transmitting power. By 2040, cost of generating and storing solar off-grid will probably hit 1 cent. or 0.50 cent especially if funding costs falls to 2%-3%. With a little bit of innovation, cost of generating and storing solar can even be negative as the solar+storage will actually make money by providing ancilliary services to the grid, until the grid/transmission itself goes bancrupt because every business will just generate their own electricity because 4 cent transmission cost is silly. inverters and controllers will be so cheap and small you can buy 10 for a price of a medium Pizza. solar panels so cheap you can line em up as road and pedestrian roads. Batteries will be so cheap a pack of smarties will be cheaper than a dozen lion batteries. Megarobots filled megafactories powered by megasolar, creating 0 cost solar panels creating even more megarobot megafactories creating even more solar panels creating an insane cycle of more and more production and lower and lower cost. Eventually we will harvest (solar efficiency x total sun beam) of energy and then….we must decide what to do with all this power.

  11. @kpkang2072

    April 14, 2026 at 5:56 pm

    It is 2019 now and unfortunately oil price didn't go up as you expected here… it's even lower than before if we consider the inflation of economy over the past 7 years….

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