DesideriScuri
Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Phydeaux The place was Hawaii. California is looking at slowing down and or other solutions for the same problem. The essential problem is this TJ: Customers of the fossil fuel generating plants pay for the distribution network as part of their bill. People that are putting collectors on their roof and selling the power back to the power companies are *not* paying for the distribution net, although they are enjoying the benefit of it. In Hawaii this meant that fewer and fewer people were paying the costs of maintain the distribution grid, and it got to be a huge problem. Any single user is not required to connect to the grid. So if they want to only power their own home they are entirely welcome to do so. However, the problem is that solar advocates *are* using the grid - they just don't want to support it. In fact the very fact of using solar power makes the grid inherently more unstable and more costly. It is, in fact, reasonable therefore to require them to pay something towards its upkeep. These parts, if you generate more power than you use, you either store it in battery banks, or you "sell" it back to the grid (which isn't counter to anything you stated). We do pay both a generation cost, and a distribution cost for power. When we "sell" it to the grid, the only credit gained, is in the generation cost. Example (purely fictional numbers; any resemblance to reality is a complete coincidence): I use 100kWh in a month, paying $10/kWh for generation and $5/kWh for distribution, but generated 50kWh in the sunny and windy portions of that month. My bill would be $1000 for the power I used, less a $500 credit for my "excess" generation, plus $500 for distribution of that 100kWh. Even though my combined cost for power is $15/kwH, my "sell price" is only $10/kWh. Since people pay distribution costs according to what they use, those that use less (even when it has nothing to do with personal power generation), will pay less than those that use more. If I were to have a battery bank connected to solar arrays and a wind farm, but tie into the grid for the assurance that I'll have power, if I neither draw from the grid, nor put anything onto the grid, why should I pay anything once everything's been installed?
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What I support: - A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
- Personal Responsibility
- Help for the truly needy
- Limited Government
- Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)
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