I'm certain it'll make it out in coming releases but Google is a funny company when it comes to their its own competing/complimenting services. One thing is for sure, only somebody on the Picasa team could give an accurate answer.
But we could hypothesise several things...
- They don't want their code reverse-engineered.
- (As you say), they aren't licensed to redist
- It's blocked in the dev version by other new features that aren't complete yet
- They don't want to release it because they want people to use PicasaWeb as a social photo network.
I don't think processing power is an issue. If they're running it in bulk on their own servers for free, a modern desktop could probably run it without issue.
