No that wasn't the reason, though its nice of you to mention it.
I'd re-read the withouthotair site the other evening after seeing Elon's presentation, as he made a similar case regarding the area of the USA needed to be powered by solar. I was a bit bummed out by the conclusion for the UK and wondered what the global equivalent was, as the UK is low on solar. I then noticed I'd skipped a chapter that does the rough calculations for other regions (http://www.withouthotair.com/c30/page_231.shtml) the basic answer being that Solar may just save us, but it'll be an incredible amount of work, both political and engineering.
(Which is basically the same answer as for the UK, though in the UK solar is mostly replaced with wind/wave/hydro as we're relatively blessed with those).
I think he may be underestimating the future efficiency gains.
There is already 30% efficient directly illuminated multi-junction PV on the market ( http://www.emcore.com/wp-content/uploads/ZTJ-Cell.pdf ), they are just so damn expensive at the moment that only the space industry are using them.
Also, while it is a huge amount of work, it is no worse than many other industries, the economics are starting to make it a good investment for big finance, and we are not likely to run short of either silicon or lithium along the way.
The Without Hot Air site seems to have got its sums wrong. It continually makes the point that we'd need to cover the whole UK in renewable energy generation, and that still wouldn't be enough.
However, we already generate 7.5% of our energy from renewables and clearly 7.5% of the country isn't covered in windfarms/solar/biofuels. Therefore he must have made a mistake somewhere: if reality disagrees with theory, the theory must be wrong.
7.5% of our energy or 7.5% of our electricity? It's the latter. We're still consuming the output of the North Sea plus a little bit more in petrol and diesel.
I'd re-read the withouthotair site the other evening after seeing Elon's presentation, as he made a similar case regarding the area of the USA needed to be powered by solar. I was a bit bummed out by the conclusion for the UK and wondered what the global equivalent was, as the UK is low on solar. I then noticed I'd skipped a chapter that does the rough calculations for other regions (http://www.withouthotair.com/c30/page_231.shtml) the basic answer being that Solar may just save us, but it'll be an incredible amount of work, both political and engineering.
(Which is basically the same answer as for the UK, though in the UK solar is mostly replaced with wind/wave/hydro as we're relatively blessed with those).