This article evokes the futuristic visions of two giants, one a writer, Jules Verne, who foresaw
water as the coal of the future, and the other a scientist, Giacomo Ciamician, who foresaw the utilization
of solar energy as an energy source with which to drive photochemical and photocatalytic reactions
for the betterment of mankind. Specifically, we examine briefly the early work of the 1960s and 1970s on the photosplitting of free water and water adsorbed on solid supports, based mostly on metal oxides, from which both hydrogen and oxygen evolve in the expected stoichiometric ratio of 2 to 1. The two oil crises of the 1970s (1973 and 1979) spurred the interest of researchers from various disciplines (photochemistry, photo-catalysis and photoelectrochemistry) in search of a Holy Grail photocatalyst, process, or strategy to achieve efficient water splitting so as to provide an energy
source alternative to fossil fuels. Some approaches to the photosplitting of water adsorbed on solid
insulators (high bandgap mat