I have to admit, this is the first time I've heard of such a thing. Can you give a source for this info? And what the hell does the Second Law of Thermodynamics have to do with it?
Actually, it's more accurate to say that the plate has moved over the hotspot which causes the caldera. If memory serves, the hotspot remains stationary, or relatively so, while the plate moves new areas of the crust across it, similar to the mechanism which has formed the Hawaiian Island chain.The Supercaldera under Yellowstone has moved from the Montana/Dakota boundary area to it's present location in Wyoming by that action.
The problem is that too many people don't see the solution as using everything in combinations. They want to see ONLY nuclear, or ONLY renewable, or ONLY coal.Use gen 4 or 5 nuclear for electric, gas for peaking. Supercritical new gen coal in areas too close to seismic areas. We have the technology now, eventually we may even have fusion. What we need is to get the government out of the way!
And while they can readily grasp improvements in cell phone technology, the idea that there can be improvements in power generation technology seems utterly alien to them. They see, for example, Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and now Fukushima as evidence that nuclear power is utterly unsafe, rather than as mistakes which we can learn from. They don't seem to want to understand the lessons that scientists and engineers have learned from these incidents, which have been, and will continue to be, incorporated in newer reactors.
Overall, though, I have to agree with you. Get the government out of the way and let the industry do what it's supposed to do.