Well it really, really depends. The thing is, there is no one major that will focus on all forms of engineering and energy, but rather, one major that really specializes in one form of energy.
The best overall major would be physics related to energy, and if absolutely devoted, environmental science.What major do scientists who study creating new forms of energy have?
Number one: Energy can NOT be created - no scientist ever managed to create energy.
Number two: It depends who YOU call a ';scientist';.
There are individuals (and there have been in the past) who discover new forms of energy, experimentally release them and study them
These individuals may NOT fit your definition of ';scientist'; because their activities contradict established orthodoxies (read: texbook science). Therefore these individuals are labeled ';amateurs'; at best, or ';pseudoscientiest'; and the ideas they develop are treated as ';voodo'; or perhaps pseudoscience.
And obviously, threy are beyond the pale...
I agree with the statement that Physics with an emphasis on energy would be appropriate. If you are wanting more of a technical approach, then electrical engineering may be for you. Just keep an open mind about freely available source potentials. You may want to do and independant study of inventors such as T H Moray, John C Bedini, and Thomas E Bearden
';The energy that is used to power a load is free...it's the source potential that you have to pay for.'; T. E. Bearden
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