PungoteagueDave
Well-known member
- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2025
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 909
- Reaction score
- 999
- Location
- Boynton Beach
- Vehicles
- ‘25 Tesla Cybertruck, ‘26 Tesla MY Launch, ‘13 Porsche C4S, ‘26 BMW R1300 GSA
- Occupation
- retired
Utility willingness to purchase power on a net metered basis cannot change because it is legislatively mandated using logic that has zero cost to the utility. The utilities must purchase my excess production at their “avoidable cost”, which is essentially what they pay to grid providers for raw power at wholesale prices. I do not receive anywhere near the retail price that consumers pay, generally something like $0.045 per kWh in Florida and Maryland, which are both low-cost states for electricity. But that adds up anyway.That's great if your utility is allowing you to make your money back but that's going to change at some point. We're starting at $24 a month to be connected to the grid and I don't think that's going to stay there, that's just going to keep rising. You're at $10 a month and it looks like they're actually paying you for the power you produce but they can change that whenever they feel like.
My understanding now, is that if you're making enough solar in the winter to cover your usage you have way too much solar for the summer. Again, that's great if your utility gives you a fair rate for it but as more folks get solar more utilities are getting rid of that in any way they can.
I maxed out my roof and it ended up being just about right. There's certain winter cloudy days where I do not make them enough to cover what the house is using and make it through the night on the battery but it's close. Even if I had more room on the roof for more panels, that would be wasted because my utility is only giving us 2 to 8 cents a kilowatt hour.
Don’t misunderstand power cycles. We use more power in the summer due to air conditioning, which costs more than heating both our Florida and Maryland homes.
Utilities are not looking to eliminate power purchase agreements with consumers - they do sometimes want to limit phase-in of some industrial-scale solar projects in order to phase them into their systems. Renewables just went over 30% of total U.S. power production, and virtually all new capacity is coming from renewable sources. Utilities are looking to bidirectional charging and Powerwall as grid backup - they needs us as much as we need them.
You say you maxed out the roof. How big is your system? My 21 kWh system is the max for one Powerwall. I could double that with a second Powerwall and more panels, but the utility would never approve that. I gamed the system a bit, convincing them I was adding a pool and spa, so they approved sizing that’s over double my actual power usage.
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