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What I don't know if if you can buy a leaf cheap enough for it to be worth fixing.
Booger says
What I don't know if if you can buy a leaf cheap enough for it to be worth fixing.
In California, you can get a used Leaf for "free" if you are "income limited". That is, PG&E will give you $4k (if for instance, your family of four makes less than $150k and lives in San Mateo county) plus the feds will kick in a 30% tax credit if you a buy used EV from a dealer. Terms and conditions apply. YMMV.
Eman says
. It would cover my monthly electricity bill of $230/mo on average.
Looks like PG&E just upped summer rates to $.49/kwHr for above baseline usage during peak hours (4-9pm) summer months. Yikes. For the amount you use, it be insane not to get solar...
Amazingly, the solar works even on cloudy and rainy days.
Cost is $17.4K after tax incentives.
Amazingly, the solar works even on cloudy and rainy days. I don’t have the knowledge to understand how it works, but it makes financial sense to have it installed for me.
Eman says
Amazingly, the solar works even on cloudy and rainy days.
You mean like in a "Better than nothing..." kind of way.
Eman says
Cost is $17.4K after tax incentives.
Incentives should be unconstitutional. Where's my $7,000 check?
Thanks to concepts like these high bar incentives(90% of the population are not in a position to lay out $17K to reap that reward) concepts like "reparations'"
are fair game. If not for this cockamamie, they would have been laughed down and ran out of town.
As the result of ever-falling costs, the Bloomberg analysts project that by 2050, wind and solar technologies will generate a most 50 percent of total electricity globally,
Stealing with Solar: The Great Net-Metering Heist
How Solar Panels Helped Wealthy Californians Pick The Pockets of Low-Income Families
Affluent households in California siphoned nearly $3.4 billion in 2021 from the pockets of low-income families through a government program called net metering. This program allows people with solar panels to get free electricity while forcing people who can’t afford them to pay all of the costs associated with maintaining the electric grid. What a steal!
https://energybadboys.substack.com/p/stealing-with-solar-the-net-metering
This program allows people with solar panels to get free electricity while forcing people who can’t afford them to pay all of the costs associated with maintaining the electric grid. What a steal!
"people with solar panels to get free electricity" - not sure which city is getting it.
With or without, the rate is still based on the "rate plan" you choose is about $0.48 in most cities around in Bay Area, CA. With panels, bill get offset from the amount of outflow.
Well, those Non-Solar Owners voted for this.
UkraineIsFucked says
Stealing with Solar: The Great Net-Metering Heist
How Solar Panels Helped Wealthy Californians Pick The Pockets of Low-Income Families
Affluent households in California siphoned nearly $3.4 billion in 2021 from the pockets of low-income families through a government program called net metering. This program allows people with solar panels to get free electricity while forcing people who can’t afford them to pay all of the costs associated with maintaining the electric grid. What a steal!
https://energybadboys.substack.com/p/stealing-with-solar-the-net-metering
Well, those Non-Solar Owners voted for this.
NEM 2.0 was a gift. Sell electricity back to PG&E at retail prices during day time. That’s 56 cents/kWh during peak and 48 cents partial peak while buying it back at night for 27.2 cents.
With NEM 3.0, it’s 8 cents/kWh credit so powerwalls are a must, which makes less financial sense.
This all adds up. With the 1% that electricity production declined in 2023, we could have added something like another 10 million EVs to the grid last year and our overall electricity use would still have remained the same.
How’s that for some good news? 🤔
Yeah: https://www.marketplace.org/2016/06/09/excess-solar-power-ca-pay-arizona-take-it/
As a result, prices have gone negative, and the Arizona utility is actually being paid to take some of that power from its next-door neighbor.
- might just be AZ who knows.
Good stuff. Too bad it doesn’t fit the narrative. Moving on.
This all adds up. With the 1% that electricity production declined in 2023, we could have added something like another 10 million EVs to the grid last year and our overall electricity use would still have remained the same.
Eman says
This all adds up. With the 1% that electricity production declined in 2023, we could have added something like another 10 million EVs to the grid last year and our overall electricity use would still have remained the same.
Did not California recently tell citizens to stop charging electric cars because of the load on the system during a heat wave?
How is this possible? One word — efficiency. The magic of efficiency could and hopefully will continue this 20-year miracle of keeping electricity consumption flat even while we add lots of new loads, as there is so much more low hanging fruit to be picked. LEDs still need to finish their market domination, and heat pumps are only just getting started and will save oodles of energy for space and water heating and even clothes drying.
Did not California recently tell citizens to stop charging electric cars because of the load on the system during a heat wave?
Did they? Was it during peak hours, or all hours?
We’re not saying don’t charge them,” she said. “We’re just saying don’t charge them between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m.”
- Based on my experience, no one charges at home during peak hours. We plug it in and have it programmed to charge after 12am. It’s just common sense to EV drivers.
- Based on my experience, no one charges at home during peak hours. We plug it in and have it programmed to charge after 12am. It’s just common sense to EV drivers.
Someone in Canada is making/saving money with solar. What are your thoughts on solar EBGuy and Hircus? Seems like you guys have solar way before I did.
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I did the math of Tesla solar panels. Cost is $17.4K after tax incentives. It would cover my monthly electricity bill of $230/mo on average. Add in a powerwall will increase the cost by $8k. Without the powerwall, it’s about 15% ROI. What am I missing?