Why impractical??? Whith a diversified mix, energy efficiency, a big market for demand response, thermal storage, and a bit of electrical storage, there is no problem with current technologies. Coming tech could decrease the cost and make it easier to implement.
> thermal storage, and a bit of electrical storage
I'll acknowledge that renewable generation costs have been falling at an impressive rate. However you're understating the problem for storage. Besides cost, there are far more complex regulatory and political hurdles. Just read about the public response to "smart meters" when they were proposed a while back.
We'll likely have price-competitive storage technology by the middle of the next decade, maybe even sooner, but it will take another two or three decades to deploy it thanks to the patchwork of regulatory complexity we're left over with from the 20th century.
Sure it is not easy, but price-competitive (cheap renewable + some cost to manage intermittence) technologies are ready
Political hurdles... what is easier ?
- Saying let's have reltively cheap 100% renewable energy that create a lot of job
- Let's have super expensive nuclear energy, there are risk but those risk are small
Yes we are getting there but some countries are at the point of diminishing returns with current renewables. For example, Germany has to pay it's neighbours to receive peak generation.
Coming tech will improve that but we could get to carbon zero far quicker and cheaper with a mix of nuclear and renewables. One problem with nuclear is that safety concerns. However nuclear has caused less death than coal generation. It does require a huge capital investment but it pays for itself over the long run. Waste is an issue but it produces a tiny volume of waste compared to any other form of generation.
We could get rid of all current coal and gas plants and have power when it's required with nuclear. Until we have a better storage option the true can't be said of any renewables (unless you are lucky enough to have abundant geothermal options). With wind and solar you have too much during peak supply and too little during peak demand.
Even the article you linked states whole sale solar and batteries are not yet economically viable.
If there is a viable thermal storage option, I'm wrong but I've not heard about it. I would love to be wrong if that is the case.
And nuclear is much much more expensive than most renewable now (https://www.lazard.com/perspective/lcoe2019/)