RollingRefrigerator
Well-known member
- First Name
- Eric
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2023
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 144
- Reaction score
- 359
- Location
- San Jose, CA
- Vehicles
- Foundation AWD CT, M3P, MYP
- Thread starter
- #1
Check out what they are rolling out in Maryland:
https://www.energy-storage.news/mar...n-alongside-virtual-power-plant-tariff-rules/
Time to put that 123 kWh pack to work to earn it's keep?
In California, Tesla has a Virtual Power Plant program for PW users. Quick summary is during ultra high demand events, PW owners can export their battery power to the grid at a pretty insane rate of $2 per kWh. The idea being it's cheaper than paying to keep the more expensive (and dirty) power plants around for a couple dozen hours of use a year.
I finally got the chance to sign up this year (despite being eligible for 3 years and calling and emailing Tesla and PG&E multiple times to get it figured out). Based on previous years I expect to earn $300 - $600 a year.
But... Will Tesla and PG&E eventually decide to also let me export my CT power through Powershare? It's in both of their best interest, because they are making more off of this than I am, obviously. All the hardware is there now, and once they enable PS for PW users via a gateway SW update, seems like this could be the next step. And now that's another $246 worth of power for each event just in the truck.
Any other VPP participants out there? Thoughts on this? Scaling the concept up seems like the way to take advantage of recent improvements in solar and ev batteries and potentially start moving towards (towards, not saying we'll ever get there) a fully renewable grid. And what a marketing incentive to be able to tell a buyer they can actually make $1000+ a year while the car sits in the driveway.
https://www.energy-storage.news/mar...n-alongside-virtual-power-plant-tariff-rules/
Time to put that 123 kWh pack to work to earn it's keep?
In California, Tesla has a Virtual Power Plant program for PW users. Quick summary is during ultra high demand events, PW owners can export their battery power to the grid at a pretty insane rate of $2 per kWh. The idea being it's cheaper than paying to keep the more expensive (and dirty) power plants around for a couple dozen hours of use a year.
I finally got the chance to sign up this year (despite being eligible for 3 years and calling and emailing Tesla and PG&E multiple times to get it figured out). Based on previous years I expect to earn $300 - $600 a year.
But... Will Tesla and PG&E eventually decide to also let me export my CT power through Powershare? It's in both of their best interest, because they are making more off of this than I am, obviously. All the hardware is there now, and once they enable PS for PW users via a gateway SW update, seems like this could be the next step. And now that's another $246 worth of power for each event just in the truck.
Any other VPP participants out there? Thoughts on this? Scaling the concept up seems like the way to take advantage of recent improvements in solar and ev batteries and potentially start moving towards (towards, not saying we'll ever get there) a fully renewable grid. And what a marketing incentive to be able to tell a buyer they can actually make $1000+ a year while the car sits in the driveway.
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