Tisme
Apathetic at Best
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The couple said they battled with AGL over billing problems for more than a decade.
Good luck anyone doing equitable business with company that was founded on the born to rule and old boy's club mentality of a Royal Charter.
In 5 years it could be cheaper to get off the grid entirely
http://www.climatecouncil.org.au/in-5-years-it-could-be-cheaper-to-get-off-the-grid-entirely
I have Origin up in Brisbane and their feed in tarrif rate is 8 cents per kWh.
Will be interesting to see what the ALP bring to the table. They did mention a few things but l wasn't really paying attention as I'm currently interstate for work.
Time will tell. Also, solar is so cheap, it might be worthwhile waiting a few years and going for an off-grid solution and using an energy company as a back-up.
I would also assume that should battery power become so feasible that many customers no longer need the energy company except as backup, they will institute a charge just to remain connected.
How would you use the energy company as a backup if you are off the grid? Do you mean you are still connected (on the grid) and remain their customer, but just exporting at all times. Presumably if you have told the energy company that you are no longer their client (my understanding of off the grid), they are going to charge you a fee every time you want to reconnect and there also could be a delay in the time that takes, which might negate them being a backup solution (if, of instance, your solar system is down for a few days because of problems).
I'm not disputing what you said, simply trying to understand if that would be feasible.
I would also assume that should battery power become so feasible that many customers no longer need the energy company except as backup, they will institute a charge just to remain connected.
... even more likely, Power Companies will lobby governments to legislate that all households pay a supply charge, whether they're connected or not. All the "poor families" that "could not afford" the up-front cost of solar and batteries, would be rallied to protest the unfairness of letting "the Rich" get away with free power at the expense of "ordinary Australians". Similar arguments were already raised when WA's King Col'n tried to renege on the 10-year FIT contract that subsidizes early adopters at 40c/exported unit.
New Graphene ‘Wonder Material’ Breakthrough Enables Doubling of Solar Panel Efficiency
One of the major reasons that solar panels are facing such hurdles to replace conventional electricity sources is because they are very inefficient. The most efficient (and most expensive) panel is currently somewhere around 32 percent efficiency. However, scientists in Switzerland have figured out a way to utilize Graphene in solar panel design, raising its efficiency to an absolutely staggering 60% – a finally feasible amount.
http://wccftech.com/graphene-wonder-material-breakthrough-enables-doubling-solar-panel-efficiency/#ixzz3QZBwmkrf
A Cheap Material Boosts Solar Cells by 50 Percent
Putting a new kind of photovoltaic material on top of a conventional solar cell can boost overall power output by half. Researchers at Stanford University added a type of material known as a perovskite to a silicon solar cell, validating an idea for cheaply increasing the efficiency of solar power that was first proposed several years ago.
Perovskites are materials with a particular crystalline structure. The perovskite used by the Stanford team contains relatively abundant and cheap materials including ammonia, iodine, and lead.
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/534511/a-cheap-material-boosts-solar-cells-by-50-percent/
Elon Musk's electric car company Tesla is about to unveil a home storage battery that could compete with the electricity companies as a power source, he said in an earnings call.
Musk said yesterday the company has completed the design of the battery.
"We are going to unveil the Tesla home battery for use for people's houses and businesses fairly soon. We have the design done, and it should go into production in about six months or so." he said.
He said the product will probably be unveiled in the next month.
"It is really great, I am really excited about it."
Chief technology officer JB Straubel also said the company was in the process of talking to a number of utility companies. “This is a business that is gaining an increasing amount of our attention," he said.
During the earnings call the company revealed it made a loss of $108m (£71m) in its fourth quarter, blaming poor sales in China.
Elon Musk's Tesla set to unveil home storage battery
I would also assume that should battery power become so feasible that many customers no longer need the energy company except as backup, they will institute a charge just to remain connected.
WA treasurer Mike Nahan apparently has been talking talking up the prospect of increasing fixed charges relative to the usage charges for electricity in the upcoming WA state budget, in particular for those who have solar panels.
In a pure economic sense the unit rate payable to the property owner for grid connect solar should be the wholesale generation rate for all the electricity generated. In WA, that's currently set at ~$0.08/kWhrIf the fixed and unit rates are set correctly in the first place then grid-connect solar poses no threat to the power industry whatsoever. Nor does gas, wood or insulation pose a threat if the rates are correctly set.
Trouble is, no Australian electricity supplier (retailer or distributor) is currently doing that, and the only one that has ever tried it 20 years ago learned the lessons from that public relations disaster (and it most certainly was an outright disaster from a PR perspective) and is in no hurry to do it again. At some point there will be no choice I suspect, and the industry is very slowly creeping forward in that direction, but we're not there yet by any means.
In a pure economic sense the unit rate payable to the property owner for grid connect solar should be the wholesale generation rate for all the electricity generated. In WA, that's currently set at ~$0.08/kWhr
If that were the case, a rebalance to a higher proportion of fixed vs usage charges as a consequence of growing rooftop solar wouldn't be necessary.
One can understand subsidy in the context of encouraging take up but there's a cost to be paid either within the electricity sector or the broader state government budget balance where the utility is state owned.
Also, where there's a rebalance towards an increased fixed user component that obviously reduces the relative price signal in relation to usage which is counter to the objective of rooftop solar in the first place.
If that were the case, a rebalance to a higher proportion of fixed vs usage charges as a consequence of growing rooftop solar wouldn't be necessary.
The Australian solar PV market is on fire. Generous subsidies and support mechanisms have produced almost 2 million solar PV installations across the country, placing Australia among the leaders in solar PV deployment. It is also literally true, in that Australia is suffering a spate of solar-*‐related fires, hundreds of them. The cause of these fires isn’t the solar panels themselves, but rather a device installed next to solar panels called a rooftop DC isolator (or disconnect) switch””a uniquely Australian requirement.
How Australia came to mandate these switches has nothing to do with safety, testing, or standards of best practice. By mid-*‐2010, with over 100,000 solar panels installed across Australia, solar panels hadn’t caused a single fire, or harm to anyone. The solar industry was booming, but apparently not everyone was happy.
Silly season on solar PV started in February 2010 with some wild claims.
Peter Marshall of the Firefighters Union of Australia was quoted as saying “a number of firefighters have lost their lives from this DC current”””a complete fabrication. Similar stories followed, and the message spread like wildfire: solar is dangerous; the firefighters said so. [1]
In mid-*‐2010, Melbourne Metropolitan Fire Brigade investigator Rod East, responding to dubious claims of solar panel-*‐caused house fires, called for tighter regulations. Specifically, Mr. East wanted “rules to ensure an isolation switch to turn off any electric current was located both at the switchboard and near the device.” A DC isolator was already required at the switchboard, but the firefighters’ demand compelled some state regulators and power companies to mandate the additional rooftop DC isolator next to solar panels. The practice was widely adopted. [2]
The federal government, in turn, ordered an inspection program on solar panels, starting in 2011. The inspections revealed that almost a quarter of the solar panel installations were substandard or unsafe. More than 90% of these installations were traced back to a single cause: the DC switch. [3]
In October 2011, Australia had its first confirmed, solar panel-*‐related fire, at a toy library in Darwin. The rooftop DC isolator caught fire, and six toddlers were evacuated from the building, fortunately located next door to the fire station. The fire didn’t spread and was quickly extinguished. [4]
Despite the lack of fires or any demonstrable harm from solar panels themselves, and in spite of the evidence showing the fire risk from DC switches, Standards Australia moved to mandate the rooftop DC switch nationwide in 2012, in the name of fire safety.
During the standards-*‐drafting process, Standards New Zealand sought an exemption from the rooftop DC isolator requirement, calling it a stupid idea. The rift eventually led to Australia-*‐only and New Zealand-*‐only sections of the standard”” usually technical standards are harmonized between the two countries. [5]
Submitters to the drafting process warned against the rooftop DC isolator requirement. Testing reports detailed the dangers of the switch, especially in firefighting situations. Further inspections of solar panels in Australia continued to show issues with the dodgy devices. But Standards Australia forged ahead, and in late 2012 the rooftop DC isolator became a legally mandated requirement in Australia””the only place in the world today.
Germany, itself a world leader in solar electricity, had once required a practice similar to Australia’s rooftop DC isolator requirement but eventually stopped, because it was causing too many fires. The Germans found that placing DC switches in exposed places creates a degenerative process that, without regular maintenance, causes the switches to heat up, and eventually, to catch fire””even the high-*‐quality German ones.[6]
In Australia, the fires started immediately after the introduction of rooftop DC isolators, and so did the product recalls. By January 2012, Australia had its first product recall on DC isolators due to a high number of faults and risk of fire. By October 2012, days before the nationwide requirement came into effect, Australia saw the front of a wave in solar panel-*‐related fires, all caused by the rooftop switch. [7]
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