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- 2 February 2006
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Where the issue arises is that a large portion of distribution costs are fixed, they exist in order to build and keep the network in place, and someone has to pay those costs.The retailer has to buy the power at a whole price, but will also have to pay transmission and distribution costs, and suffer losses.
Your "export" figures are impressive, and while we could match them it would void our 20 year contract that limited us to a 5kWh inverter that capped our feed in rate. That said, we do get 52cents/kW FIT so are very happy.While don't have much sympathy for the energy distributors, I can get why they are nervous about the bottom line. I had a look at this houses' usage over the last last four days.
Drawn from grid over 24 hours.
0.589 kWh
0.775 kWh
0.480 kWh
0.578 kWh
Solar export over same period.
65.413 kWh
58.924 kWh
64.116 kWh
57.147 kWh
Of course there is the daily supply charge but I would incur that irrespective of having solar or not (although the rate would vary slightly.)
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