The CSIRO Energy Centre (researching use of hydrogen) in newcastle has over 1 million dollars worth of solar cells on the roof of their building, not one follows the sun! why? It would require more enrgy to follow the sun then they get back from each cell, interesting!!
I can't believe that's true. Though I can believe they might think it. My son bought a couple of crêpes about a month back and the guys cooking the crepes were using reflectors to shine sunlight onto the bottom of the metal plate that the pancake mix cooked on - a solar powered crêpe cooker. To make the reflector follow the sun they had a crude mechanism with a chain driven by an electric motor and probably some gearing - I didn't study it in detail, I was just buying a crêpe for a 6 year old.
The electric motor was connected to two small solar cells, say about 6 square inches each (ie 6" by 1"), and I had the impression it was just used to determine a voltage difference. Whichever cell generated the bigger voltage or current or whatever would determine which way the motor turned, if at all.
They had a couple of strange old glass bottles (filled with water) where the diameter seemed to have been chosen to focus a large width of sunlight onto the narrow solar cell strip.
So if the reflector was a bit off track, one cell would produce more than the other, feed the motor, motor would run a touch, and gearing would move the reflector.
==
In the Science and Industry Museum at Manchester they have a toy for kids to play with. Its a marble sphere weighing just under 100 kilograms, over 200 pounds say if you want to think imperial units. My 6 year old used to have fun spinning it round as fast as he could.
The point is it takes very little force to spin it, since it revolves around its own centre of gravity. So while you cannot stop it or start it moving quickly in a short time, it is surprisingly easy to manipulate given that the thing is near impossible to lift up. It is litterally child's play.
Moving something around its center of gravity once in a day takes very little work.
==
So the problem might be that you have a load of experts in hydrogen power where solar power experts are required. Or they might be over engineering things.
If you stir a scotch on the rocks, the drink doesn't warm up until the ice cubes have melted. If you over-engineer that problem you could have teams of scientists studying deflections in the gulf stream and trying to calculate net global changes in ocean temperatures due to global warming, instead of just saying nothing much happens until Greenland is green again. Trying to calculate the temperature at any point in your scotch on the rocks is a pointless exercise for the people that haven't grasped the basic principle that the drink only really starts to warm up after the ice has melted.