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Utilities Should Worry; Rooftop Solar Could Soon Cut Their Profit

Lucas123 writes A study by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory predicts that distributed rooftop solar panel installations will grow from 0.2% market penetration today to 10% by 2022, during which time they're likely to cut utility profits from 8% to 41%. Using those same metrics, electricity rates for utility customers will grow only by as much as 2.7% over the next eight years. By comparison, the cost of electricity on average rose 3.1% from 2013 to 2014. The study was performed for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy under the U.S. Department of Energy. One of the main purposes of the study was to evaluate measures that could be pursued by utilities and regulators to reduce the financial impacts of distributed photovoltaics.

517 comments

  1. Really? by Barny · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And you think the utilities will suffer because of this? Here in Australia power companies have just started bringing in (opt-in for now) billing at different rates for different times of the day for all a house's power. They will simply make day-time power prices stay the same and increase prices for night-time usage, passing the loss on to customers as they always have.

    Quite naive to think a company would accept the losses themselves.

    --
    ...
    /me sighs
    1. Re:Really? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 5, Interesting

      One would think that this makes perfect sense. How is it "passing the loss on to customers"? It used to be that night-time electricity was cheaper because the supply was largely flat, while the demand got lower at night. If the day-time electricity production gets to be largely covered by PV, the whole thing may either turn around or at least shift toward day-time electricity being cheaper simply because of basic economy principles, not because of some malicious intent.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    2. Re:Really? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Look at Germany. Solar has made coal and nuclear unprofitable. They were replacing all the old coal plants with new, more efficient ones, but have now cancelled many of them and will simply reduce capacity. Even the new ones are unlikely to make any money now.

      I don't think utilities can stop this happening. They will die kicking and screaming but ultimately the industry must shrink.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:Really? by QuantumLeaper · · Score: 1

      Just like the Buggy whip makers did.

    4. Re:Really? by Zorpheus · · Score: 5, Informative

      But this is due to the laws. The network companies in Germany have to take all solar power. They have to pay a fixed price. The losses they make from this are covered by an extra fee paid by consumers.
      All other (non-renewable) power plants have to compete for the rest of the market, and this is shrinking due to the strong growth of solar and wind power. That is why coal power plants are shut down, and why gas power plants are barely running.

    5. Re:Really? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Actually, it is mostly wind, not solar, that is causing the occasional overcapacity price drops. Solar is still a relatively small percentage of overall generation. Germany's electric prices are still, overall, quite high compared to the US.

    6. Re:Really? by StripedCow · · Score: 1

      Also, your utility co will soon contact you to rent roof space.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    7. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a losing strategy. Every price hike makes more technology economically viable. At current prices, storing solar generated electricity is too expensive, but it's not that far out, especially if a market for short term energy storage emerges and battery technology more suited to the task becomes available instead of homegrown solutions with deep cycle lead-acid boat batteries. Even people who are not in regions where solar is attractive might feel the need to look for alternative solutions in case of a price hike: Businesses in particular could be attracted to micro-cogeneration, for example.

      The problem for the power companies is that there simply is a ceiling to the power price, and it's not formed by their customers' willingness to pay but by the alternative energy sources.

    8. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Obviously you are misinformed or just ignorant... Germany has one of the highest rates for electricity in the world. How do you think solar got such a foot hold ? It was paid for and still being propped up by the consumers ... Who pay out their nose just to say they are green... And just in case a tsunami hits there they will be safe since they got rid of nuclear power...

    9. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not true. They're still building new coal power plants and still planning to bulldoze East German villages for about the dirtiest kind of coal there is. And subsidies for renewable energies have been cut. Especially the German socialdemocrats are doing all they can to prevent a transition to sustainable energy. They're even promoting fracking.

    10. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 5, Informative

      Do you even know why?

      Because I recall explaining it to you already, just a few weeks ago. Right here on slashdot. And here you are again, trolling on the subject as it it never occurred.

      To those ignorant, he's correct, but the reason isn't that renewables are functional, but that legal system for selling electricity was jury-rigged to serve unstable renewables at the cost of everyone else, from customers to competitors.

      Electricity in Germany, like most EU states is sold on exchanges and spot sale price is determined based on it, while long term contracts usually are at least loosely based on those prices as well.
      And in Germany, there is a law that dictates that before you can sell any coal/nuclear power on exchange, ALL of produced renewable power must be sold.

      In other words - when wind blows, if you're running a nuclear or coal plant, you cannot sell any of your produced electricity until your wind/solar competitors sold everything they produced. At the same time, you are not allowed to shut the plant down, because you need to sit on the grid as spinning reserve for when wind blows too hard or stops blowing to pick up the slack.

      This has resulted in ridiculous paradoxes, such as the fact that spinning reserve which is mostly coal and natural gas has become unprofitable, causing bankruptcies. Not because electricity is cheap - when renewables are down, the spot price is ridiculously high, and when you count the subsidies in Germany which are pushed to building and maintaining renewables, electricity in Germany is incredibly expensive for end customers. But at the same time, when renewables do produce, coal, natural gas and nuclear plants cannot sell electricity (not because they don't produce energy, but because laws ban them from doing so!) and are forced to actually pay people who take their electricity (again, grid balance!)

      Which in turn prevented renewables from being hooked to the network, because you cannot hook wind or solar to network without almost entire capacity worth of spinning reserve sitting on the network - you risk grid collapse and those rules are there for that very reason. The situation is utterly ridiculous and is a great example of just how dysfunctional the current German model is. Because the moment you remove this particular rule, electricity cost would collapse and renewables would dive deep into the red as their unstable production cycle would mean that the only times they could sell was the same time that others can sell, meaning their electricity would always be very cheap and far below levels needed to pay back for the plant.

      Germany is a great example of an utter failure in terms of emissions as well. The moment is started implementing the aforementioned policy, it had to break its Kyoto targets of CO2 emissions reduction (more spinning reserve needed due to inherent instability of renewables), and after 15 years of stable yearly reduction of CO2 emissions, Germany's CO2 emissions grew for several years after implementation of these policies.

    11. Re:Really? by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Catch is even that has limits. Once battery technology is there and you can combine wind with solar and can store at least 48 hours average use, than it is all over for the except for supplying medium and high density housing together with commercial and industrial but the residential market will go solar with battery storage.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    12. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you think the utilities will suffer because of this? [...] They will simply [...] increase prices for night-time usage, passing the loss on to customers as they always have.

      Quite naive to think a company would accept the losses themselves.

      Apparently you don't understand how utility regulation works. Don't get me wrong, something will happen to ensure that the utilities do not go bankrupt, and that something might even be a rate increase. But the utilities cannot by themselves simply "decide to increase prices". They must get permission from the government first.

    13. Re:Really? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      the whole thing may either turn around or at least shift toward day-time electricity being cheaper simply because of basic economy principles, not because of some malicious intent.

      We should stop pretending that there is anything like a "Law of Supply and Demand" when it comes to energy.

      And if you want proof of "malicious intent"...

      http://thinkprogress.org/clima...

      http://www.tulsaworld.com/news...

      http://www.deseretnews.com/art...

      The Koch Brothers (and others) are pushing these "solar tariff", sun tax and surcharge laws all across the country. The rationale in their advertisements has varied from place to place, but generally it's "Solar energy is costing us money so people who use solar energy should pay double, one way or the other, because screw you, that's why". And yes, it even applies to solar which is not on the grid. So if you want to set up some solar panels to augment your daytime energy use and maybe a battery for night time, be prepared to pay this new tariff because of the Koch Brothers and their representatives at Americans For Prosperity

      They're determined to send a message: "If you think you can leave us and go back to your mother, think again sweetie, or maybe you'll run into another door."

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    14. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Do you even know why?
      > Germany's CO2 emissions grew for several years after implementation of these policies.

      Seems like you have a narrative that isn't universally agreed upon.

      When I google for "german co2 emissions" I find a number of articles that offer a different explanation for the current situation. They put the blame on Fukushima, saying that the rise in CO2 corresponds with the decommissioning of 8 out of Germany's 17 reactors in the post-fukushima hysteria. They say that solar has primarily replaced what was formerly nuclear with the difference being made up by increased coal that was previously scheduled to come online hence increased CO2.

      While AmiMoJo is probably wrong about solar making coal and nuclear unprofitable, it seems the weird taxation is really just an indirect way of paying for solar to replace nuclear rather than for solar to replace coal.

    15. Re:Really? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1, Informative

      Because I recall explaining it to you already, just a few weeks ago

      Yes, your fable about the German renewable energy program is the narrative coming out of the energy industry and the right-wing press. However, it's pretty much phony, or at best, misleading. Whenever you find that story told, you will invariably also find adverts for fossil fuel companies. You find statements like this one:

      In other words - when wind blows, if you're running a nuclear or coal plant, you cannot sell any of your produced electricity until your wind/solar competitors sold everything they produced. At the same time, you are not allowed to shut the plant down, because you need to sit on the grid as spinning reserve for when wind blows too hard or stops blowing to pick up the slack.

      Which is basically like saying, "Hey, there's an inherent flaw in our method of producing energy, so if you come up with something better, it's your fault if there are problems". Seriously, think for a minute about that Luckyo quote and what it means. There's so much nonsense coming out of the energy industry right now that it's not even funny. And it's a worldwide, coordinated effort to spread FUD (and things like the "Sun Tax" and "Solar Surcharge" and other alternative energy tariffs).

      However, the Brattle Group's recent study tells a different story about Germany's experiment:

      http://cleantechnica.com/2014/...

      Here's the Brattle Group's actual study:

      http://www.brattle.com/system/...

      In fact, the program is so successful that Angela Merkel is now pushing reductions and eventual phasing out of the subsidies.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    16. Re:Really? by currently_awake · · Score: 2

      Germany is massively subsidizing solar. Given they are currently going broke I expect the massive subsidies will eventually go away, resulting in a huge price hike in solar and a long delay while they build cheaper coal or natural gas power plants.

    17. Re:Really? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

      Well, first, the Cock brothers have little or no influence on me (unless they started doing business overseas), and second, obviously you can always have a broken system in specific times and places such as the contemporary US, but I was talking about the the energy market from the technological-economical perspective. Obviously any market can be twisted pretty much in any direction you want, but how is that relevant for a technologist (as opposed to a lawmaker, which I am not) eludes me.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    18. Re:Really? by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      Molten salt (thermal) batteries handle the day/night/no wind problem effectively, we just need to build it. We should also build nuclear power plants to cover base load instead of coal (the dirtiest source of power in the world).

    19. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Add to this that large industrial users are having to install their own generators and UPS like solutions to stop expensive equipment being damaged, and plant downtime, by short under/over events caused by the increasingly unstable grid. It's gotten to the point that some of these large producers have started threatening to leave Germany altogether.

    20. Re:Really? by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      The world has changed.

      In general, utilities are now split between load serving and generation. It's not a complete transition, but it is happening. If your area isn't like this yet, it will be. Even semi-red nations are seeing the increased efficiency and going to power pools, despite much gnashing of teeth from the public utility unions.

      Load serving utilities will not go broke, that is true. But pure generators are on their own. Solar system owners are guaranteed a rate, but IIRC that rate is dropping over time. Those not in early will not get their investment back.

      The greens in Germany see the outrageous electric rates as a feature. Anything to cut usage.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    21. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes yes, Germany is currently going broke. Pass on whatever you're smoking, you've had enough. (Side note: It's not a simple subsidy as it's not paid out of taxes or debt. The cost is rolled into the kWh price.)

    22. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We should stop pretending that there is anything like a "Law of Supply and Demand" when it comes to energy.

      Elon Musk will make history because Laws of Supply and Demand does apply to energy and Tesla Motors will win big!

    23. Re:Really? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Isn't that because a lot of the technology employed outside the renewable industry is horribly outdated? What about predictive modeling, better grid connections at longer distances (for geographic smoothing of intermittent solar and wind power production), and fast-acting devices such as gas turbines instead of steam boilers and nuclear reactors? Of course it doesn't work if everything outside of new plants is antiquated, but is it going to stay that way forever? In the battle between increasingly cheaper solar panels and increasingly more expensive fossil fuels, I just don't see how the fossil fuels are going to win.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    24. Re:Really? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Because I recall explaining it to you already, just a few weeks ago. Right here on slashdot. And here you are again, trolling on the subject as it it never occurred.

      Truth is, we're heading for a collapse. Fossil fuels are running out, and couldn't be used ad infinitum even if they were in infinite supply do to their enviromental effects. They could be replaced with nuclear power, but the threat of nuclear war has - likely forever - tarnished their reputation, leading to slow pace of technical development, high costs and outright bans. Should fusion start working tomorrow, it would run headlong into these same problems. So what does that leave? A fantasy about windmills powering an industrial civilization. Of course people want to believe it. And so they will continue believing it, right until the bitter end - and the survivors will continue saying "if only windmills had gotten more money!"

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    25. Re:Really? by Sqr(twg) · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The difference being that nobody needed buggy whips anymore. People here in Germany still need electricity at night.

      Because of the way the law is written, solar cell owners are allowed to use the grid as a battery. Their electricity consumption/production is not billed instantly but averaged, so that someone with enough excess solar power during the day doesn't have to pay anything for grid power during the night.

      The coal, gas and nuclear plants have to vary their production to take up the slack when wind and solar go down, which is expensive, and it becomes more expensive the more renewables there are. At some points it becomes unprofitable to build, and this is where we are now.

    26. Re:Really? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Wow, that page is ludicrous...

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    27. Re:Really? by timeOday · · Score: 3, Informative
      "Relatively small" is subjective, but solar production in Germany is what I would call "surprisingly significant":

      Germany generated over half its electricity demand from solar for the first time ever on 9 June, and the UK, basking in the sunniest weather of summer during the longest days of the year, nearly doubled its 2013 peak solar power output at the solstice weekend.

      cite

      Germany is really leading the way.

    28. Re:Really? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      that legal system for selling electricity was jury-rigged

      That phrase... I do not think it means what you think it means.

      Germany is in the middle of the transition. There are still 10 years to go. Things can get a bit extreme at times, but it's basically working really well. Short term price increases (still not the most expensive in Europe) and increased CO2 in exchange for being nuclear free, down heavily on coal and gas, and up massively on renewables by 2024. It also makes Germany the world leader in renewables, so German companies are getting all that business overseas too.

      Luckyo, you seem to have either not understood or ignored my reply last time, or maybe you just feel butthurt that your cool nuclear tech is being pushed out in favour of hippy windmills and solar panels. I'm sorry you feel that way.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    29. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but I bet roof mounted solar cells don't work very well when covered with several inches of snow, which would be ~ Dec -> March here. That's a good chunk of the year and outside of AC when I use the most electricity(short days/long nights).

      Hardly even used the AC at all this past summer(2014), only had 3 90+ days in the "official" NWS summer months, then one more in Sep, and not many high 80s either.

      Still wouldn't help with heating either even if I had electric heat(gas) which is really the most expensive utility period, as the same time that it is maximally used would e when those panels are buried -> only possible savings would be AC but again that's on an interruptible service which has very cheap rates.

      It always amazes me these pie-in-the-sky reports out of places like AZ/NM/CA with how wonderful solar is when the N Central/East portions of the country are buried in snow for a significant portion of the year, and the portion that I would expect would lead to highest electric usage simply because of the short days and long nights if nothing else. And heating is mostly gas based(of some sort, used to be coal as a matter of fact this house used to have an old coal furnace that got converted to gas(no idea when that happened, but I'd guess more than 50y ago) before it got ganked for a new central air/heat system), I've seen very few electric based.

    30. Re:Really? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Puh-shaw, ever look inside the "tool cabinet" at a BDSM club?

      Me neither! But I bet if we did, we might find one or two repurposed buggy whips. Just because the primary use of your product goes out of vogue doesn't mean it stops being useful alltogether. Hell, silly putty started life as a failed plastic explosive.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    31. Re:Really? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      Did they cancel winter in Germany? It's pretty far north.

      According to Wikipedia, Germany got more than half its energy from nuclear and coal in the first half of 2014. So if they're unprofitable, it's because they're selling the power too cheap. The demand is there.

    32. Re:Really? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 2

      There you go, citing a moment in time when, during one of it lowest power usage moments, and a fortunate condition of high winds and sun across the country, a significant percentage was generated. But, the percentages even changed dramatically during that same day. Over the course of the year and during any given heavy load timeframe, the true picture is formed and it looks quite different. That's why it is quite stupid to look at anything but total GWh of electricity produced and used on an annual basis. That is really all that matters in the end, and I don't see solar tooting that horn in Germany.

      If you took a short enough timeframe, an AAA battery has enough power to supply all of Germany. Its a stupid trick that plays well in PR to the less informed.

    33. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      The narrative may not be "agreed upon", which is understandable considering how many Greens politicians put their careers on the line with implementing the failed policy, but it's factual. German Environmental Agency numbers are simply not up for discussion.

      Here is the trend until the implementation of the policy in 2008:
      http://www.theglobaleconomy.co...

      German Environmental Agency had to obfuscate the follow-up numbers for political reasons, so you'll find that many sources cut off at 2009. However it had to continue reporting, and as a result, the numbers are there, both on its own page and on Eurostat's.

      Here for example is the report on EU-wide 2012-2013 comparison which shows very well just how badly Germany's goal was damaged by Energiewende:
      http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa....
      Here is the same report for 2011-2012
      http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa....

    34. Re: Really? by kenh · · Score: 2

      Yeah, Germany has it all figured out...

      According to the New York Times (9-19-2013), not so much:

      German families are being hit by rapidly increasing electricity rates, to the point where growing numbers of them can no longer afford to pay the bill. Businesses are more and more worried that their energy costs will put them at a disadvantage to competitors in nations with lower energy costs, and some energy-intensive industries have begun to shun the country because they fear steeper costs ahead.

      Newly constructed offshore wind farms churn unconnected to an energy grid still in need of expansion. And despite all the costs, carbon emissions actually rose last year as reserve coal-burning plants were fired up to close gaps in energy supplies.

      A new phrase, âoeenergy poverty,â has entered the lexicon.

      --
      Ken
    35. Re:Really? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'll also add that it took approximately 100 Billion Euro of taxpayer money in just the subsidy portion to pay for that accomplishment. Not very impressive at all. Wind, by cost comparison in Germany is kicking solar's ass.

    36. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      And here are the actual cold, hard numbers:

      Here is the trend until the implementation of the policy in 2008:
      http://www.theglobaleconomy.co...

      German Environmental Agency had to obfuscate the follow-up numbers for political reasons, so you'll find that many sources cut off at 2009. However it had to continue reporting, and as a result, the numbers are there, both on its own page and on Eurostat's.

      Here for example is the report on EU-wide 2012-2013 comparison which shows very well just how badly Germany's goal was damaged by Energiewende:
      http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa....
      Here is the same report for 2011-2012
      http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa....

      P.S. Der Spiegel is "right wing press" now? Really?

    37. Re:Really? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      The cuts to subsidies cannot keep up with the dropping cost of renewables. The subsidies should be cut further and renewables would still be profitable. At some point there will be a tipping point when cost for renewables drops below coal. Solar is going to be a disruptive technology on the order of the internet.

    38. Re: Really? by kenh · · Score: 1

      Solar cells on your roof simply are not cost competitive against utility company power. Period.

      The requirement that utility company's buy your excess 'green' energy whenever you happen to have some at RETAIL prices artificially lowers the cost of rooftop photovoltaics.

      Photovoltaics are not a substitute for a connection to the power grid *unless* you add a storage device to capture your excess electricity during the day so you can have power at night.

      --
      Ken
    39. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      This issue isn't quite as major as the cost. In general, these pieces of equipment that require quicker response to AC frequency changes at feed in than specified in grid's specs will have some soft of backup power regardless. I don't recall hearing of a significant relaxation of grid specs in Germany over renewables, do you know something I don't?

    40. Re:Really? by Tokolosh · · Score: 1

      I assume you are happy to pay German prices for your electricity?

      --
      Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
    41. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      You'll have to define "horribly outdated". Most of the electric grid systems are upgraded as needed, as grids are an investment for centuries, not years. Even burner based power plants usually have a lifetime cycle of at least 40-60 years. A power plant built 40 years ago is not "outdated" - especially if it had its mid-life upgrades done and as a result has modern automation and control systems, as well as other relevant upgrades done.

      Same goes for the grid. It's perfectly functional and stable. It does exactly what it's designed to do - ensure that people don't have to think if they are going to get power from the grid when they plug something in, turn something on, or have a major factory going through a complex production cycle. That's grid's job, and it does it admirably in most of the Western countries.

    42. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      France, just across the border from Germany, get about 70-80% of energy from nuclear. So much for "tarnished reputation" being a factor in producing power.

      And frankly, it's not a "fantasy". The concept of wind power providibg significant amount of energy is feasible. The problem is the technology required, which we do not possess yet. My problem is that instead of investing in the technology, Germany invested into massively implementing technology not yet ready for the mass implementation. Almost all of their problems are essentially symptoms of this aspect of the issue.

    43. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In reality everyone will be paying more for power, but indirectly. Solar power is heavily subsidized. Unless government decide to just add it to the debt (which is likly since no one cares about the national debt) Taxes will raise on companies, if companies have taxes raised, that cost will be added into the products they make. So we will be paying for power in everything we buy like we started to do for health care.

      We will be paying for power without realizing it. The loss a company makes is always passed to the customer. If they don't they would just close down. It is how a business works: You add up all expenses, set a % of minimum profit, and add that to the cost of each megawatt.

    44. Re:Really? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      when wind blows, if you're running a nuclear or coal plant, you cannot sell any of your produced electricity until your wind/solar competitors sold everything they produced

      In a free market wouldn't coal be at a similar disadvantage? Solar/wind would sell for any price above 0 but coal could not sell below the cost of the resource. When the wind is blowing and the sun is shining the renewable utilities will always sell at market price - even if that drives the market price down to almost nothing. We really need to develop a market that can handle this. Probably that will mean dropping feed in tariffs and charging the consumer a market rate rather than subsidizing the consumer. New technologies will be required to help manage this. For instance your car would charge automatically when the rate drops below 5 cents (and possibly sell excess when the the price is quite high). It is going to require a revolution but given the trajectory of the cost of solar - that revolution is coming one way or the other.

    45. Re:Really? by icebike · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This expense of varying their production is offset by fuel savings, and is largely FUD spewed by the facilities.

      They have been varying their production throughout the day for over a hundred years. It's what electric utilities do.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    46. Re:Really? by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Look at Germany. Solar has made coal and nuclear unprofitable.

      That isn't something to be proud of. Solar is, by far, the most expensive way to commercially generate electricity. If solar has made coal and nuclear unprofitable in Germany, you guys are doing something seriously screwy. Germany's sunshine profile is absolutely terrible for solar. The capacity factor (ratio of actual annual generation to generation capacity) you can calculate based on Germany's annual solar power stats is around 0.1, compared to 0.145 for the continental U.S., and 0.185 for the desert southwest U.S. i.e. the same PV panel in the desert southwest U.S. will produce 1.85x as much electricity that it does if located in Germany.

      Since there hasn't been some miraculous breakthrough in PV solar production efficiency, the only remaining possibility is that electricity prices in Germany have risen so high that solar has artificially become competitive. And that's precisely what you see. You guys have enacted laws making producing electricity cheaply so difficult, that the price has risen to the point where solar "makes sense."

    47. Re:Really? by DanielRavenNest · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The largest solar-thermal plant yet built, Ivanpah, at 400 MW capacity, is on the same transmission lines as Hoover Dam. Both are near Las Vegas. It doesn't need thermal storage because the dam effectively does the job. When Ivanpah is running, Hoover can save the water for other times of day.

      When you look at a grid as a whole, instead of individual plants, you find synergies like this you can apply. Detractors of renewable energy tend to ignore that most plants are grid-connected, and power demands vary by time of day and season. Thus Ivanpah is well matched to Las Vegas. Peak demand happens when it is sunny and everyone is running air conditioning. Sunny is exactly when that plant is pumping out electricity.

      Solar, however, is a poor match for the Pacific Northwest, because it is cloudy much of the time. Instead, hydroelectric and nuclear are the main sources up there. Lots of rain and mountains make hydro easier to build. Detractors will point to Germany and say solar sucks. Well, Germany is far north, and not very sunny. Italy and Spain are better suited climatically. Just because it doesn't work that well in one country or region does not mean it cannot work in better locations. The opposite example is Chile, which is rapidly installing solar. The high Andean plateau is not only exceedingly dry, it is cold and high altitude, both of which improve performance of solar panels.

    48. Re:Really? by Bengie · · Score: 1

      "Hey, there's an inherent flaw in our method of producing energy, so if you come up with something better, it's your fault if there are problems".

      What you could infer from that is generating power via fossil fuels or nuclear is not economically feasible in the face of encouraging renewables. This means there is no reason to privately own these plants and it should instead be funded via taxes. You can't get rid of them, yet it's not worth running them from a private perspective. Kind of like police. No one person wants to pay for police, but we as a society know we need them.

    49. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah? Well here in California the electric companies are required by law to pay individuals for any excess power that they generate which is added to the grid.

    50. Re:Really? by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      Intelligent people's birthrate adapts to the available resources. In the countries he mentions the cost of living to income ratio must be too high to where people hold back on having kids. The talk he gives also sounds reminiscent of Hitler's propaganda against the wheelchair bound disabled on welfare. I wanna see this Bill Whittle guy not give money to an elderly to feed who reached 90 years old and ran out of retirement savings, because she did not expect to live that long. Extremes of any kind are bad, this includes extreme socialism and extreme capitalism. Balance is the key.

      As far as utility price abuses go, the solution is simple: off grid as much as you can. For instance my gas company charges $25 basic fee even if I don't use any natural gas at all. That's a lot of money and it's bullshit. I'd rather live in a tent in the middle of the woods and heat with propane cylinders of firewood. Off grid off grid off grid when it comes to these utility natural monopoly extreme capitalist motherfuckers.

    51. Re:Really? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Which in turn prevented renewables from being hooked to the network, because you cannot hook wind or solar to network without almost entire capacity worth of spinning reserve sitting on the network - you risk grid collapse and those rules are there for that very reason. The situation is utterly ridiculous and is a great example of just how dysfunctional the current German model is.

      And they're perfectly aware of it and are moving to solve it by investing in development of home battery storage. A story that was covered on Slashdot in 2013.

      Yes it's a real problem. There's a known solution. Not a high tech solution, either. Battery storage on that scale is extremely well understood. Business has been using battery backup systems designed to serve whole buildings for decades. The buildings are called data centers. Practically every data center in the world has what you'd call "utility scale" battery backup, good for at least several minutes for the whole building, to give local generators time to spin up. Expanding the capacity enough to eliminate the generator part for a house and shrinking the size enough to reasonably install in a house is what the German initiative is all about, and that's just engineering. Something Germans are exceedingly good at.

      It is an acknowledged problem with a solution that has been under development for nearly a year already. It will be solved, and solved fairly soon. It will be deployed over the course of the next several years, and at the end of that time, much if not most of that spinning reserve will be shut down. Possibly permanently. It's conceivable that within my lifetime, there will be no operating fossil fuel electrical generation plants in Germany at all. Germans will enjoy individual energy independence. Their personal generation + storage systems will pay for themselves, a personal capital investment outcome that is exceedingly unusual, and then go on generating literally free power for years after the investment is paid off.

    52. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [Citation needed] (In other words: You're making up numbers and you know it.)

    53. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Winter is when we export our excess wind generated electricity to France because they can't run their nuclear power plants on frozen rivers but use a lot of electricity for resistive heating in their uninsulated homes, right? The perils of cheap electricity...

    54. Re:Really? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      None of those links are working right now, but I'm familiar with the assertion, which you will hear on Fox News, Washington Times, and other right-wing sites.

      They show,

      1) The German program did not meet it's initial highly-optimistic estimates, but was still plenty successful, and got more successful over the past five years even in the face of huge energy industry opposition (including that coming from the conservative government), PLUS the freeze on nuclear after Fukushima.

      2) The "damage" you describe only shows the estimates fell short, not that the program was a failure. In fact, in the face of the freeze on nuclear in the wake of Fukushima, you could say that Energiewende is performing remarkably well.

      P.S. Der Spiegel is "right wing press" now? Really?

      Were your links to Der Spiegel? None of the URLs are to Der Spiegel, so I'm not sure why you're referencing them.

      The arguments you're making sound suspiciously familiar to anyone who has been following the political debate over Obamacare in the US. The more popular the program gets, and the more its success is evident, the more panicked and shrill the opposition.

      Whether or not Energiewende is ultimately the program that gets them there or not, the movement to more renewable resources for energy is inexorable. Fission is not going to be the ultimate answer, and it's increasingly clear that fossil fuels time has come and gone. They'll both still be with us for a while, but there is evidence that the days of control of everyone's energy being in the hands of a very few is coming to an end. I wouldn't be surprised if in my lifetime residential consumers no longer need to be connected to a grid at all. Imagine the shift in political power that would bring and the amazing level of freedom that would give ordinary citizens.

      It's amazing, really, how the Right hates centralized political power but loves the idea of centralized corporate control over the very energy that powers our lives.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    55. Re:Really? by Blaskowicz · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Varying the production more often and with more amplitude decreases the efficiency and increases the maintenance costs. Maybe that's a claim by the power industries but that seems to be a legit one.
      Like, this stuff is not free and to just build solar and wind capacity (whose nominal megawatts/gigawatts are inflated and capacity factor overestimated) while not caring about the grid is myopic and stupid.

      Wind is especially problematic as it can fall off a cliff from one hour to the next and this may happen country-wide.
      Mind you I believe I'm a pretty hard line environmentalist next to most everyone. I "hate" all those renewables because Germany has shown up what actually happens when you apply the dogmatic, simplistic no-thinking thinking. Higher costs for everyone who pays and the CO2 emissions increasing.

      I believe we need new industries that can consume the intermittent surplus energy.
      E.g. a place that manages a fleet of light trucks (for companies to use and for people to rent for the day), that perhaps routinely does battery swaps, where a shit ton of battery charging happens when it's the cheapest but the power use is strongly coupled to consumption goals, updated every 5 minutes and they may quickly collapse or rise back as dictated by the utility provider or some kind of regulatory structure. I'll call that a "push smartgrid".

      Chemical industry with a production that can easily be scaled up/down or rather "scaled out", as per the computer jargon. Well I hope such things can be done (with "reverse fuel cells", water treatment/dessalination, or who knows what) and obviously there would be a lot of engineering and investment needed.

    56. Re:Really? by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 2

      If we don't watch out they'll pay Joe Barton to tell everyone in the house that the sun is a finite resource and sucking all the solar rays into these newfangled panels will cause it to run out sooner.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    57. Re:Really? by davydagger · · Score: 1

      >Now conservatives have beliefs too, but our beliefs are not based on what we wish to be true but what the evidence shows us to be true.

      my sides, my sides.

    58. Re:Really? by davydagger · · Score: 1

      oh you, and your moderation fallicy.

    59. Re:Really? by davydagger · · Score: 2

      but obvious it won't happen, because they will keep prices down to stay competative, right? I mean obviously the invisible forces of the market will prevent the large corporations from exploiting us? I mean, they are savy businessmen who are attuned to providing the customers with exactly what they want, otherwise they'd simply go out of business.

      Or is just the concept of "de-regulating utilities" gone a little too far.

    60. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Roof top solar power generation comes in at a price firmly below current retail price in Germany, including financing costs, etc. That is despite Germany's unfavorable climate. If you use all your solar generated electricity, it will lower your electricity bill, with not a cent in subsidies exchanging hands. The guaranteed price for excess electricity is already significantly below retail price (about half) and scheduled to decline further. The crossover was ca. two years ago.

      The widely hated "EEG Umlage", the part of the price per kWh which (completely) pays for the price guarantee on renewable energy fed into the grid, is expected to remain the same or decrease next year. Take a look at this graph showing the components of the kWh price. Over 10 years from 2002 to 2012, the electricity price increased from 16ct/kWh to 26ct/kWh (ca. 60% increase). In the same timeframe, heating oil (diesel without the taxes) more than doubled in price: 35ct/l to 85ct/l for a 140% increase. Also note that the disproportional increase in the "EEG Umlage" since 2009 is accompanied by a decrease of the wholesale price: The effect of the renewables on the wholesale electricity price compensates the "EEG Umlage" almost completely.

    61. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A practice like that will simply push the economics in favor of larger storage systems for those with PV setups.

    62. Re:Really? by davydagger · · Score: 1

      which can be offset by arrays of batteries that solar can charge at night. A combination of solar, wind, geo-thermal, and of course batteries for night is the way forward.

      Of course you can throw in bio-combustables for those middle-of-nowhere places where the above are not feasible.(making enough bio-diesel suddenly becomes feasible when 90% of all our other power comes from other energy)

    63. Re:Really? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Germany's cost of energy is FAR higher than its peers. http://shrinkthatfootprint.com...

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    64. Re:Really? by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      France had that usual Colbertian, Louis XIV attitude of über strong centralization applied to nearly everything, so you have a single giant company (formerly 100% state owned, now 84% state owned) managing well over 50 nuclear reactors, and another virtually 100% state owned company dealing with plant building and the whole fuel cycle.

      I guess that is what the nuclear industry needs. It's as if you had a company headquartered in Washington D.C., owned at 100% by the Department of Energy that operated all the 210 or so reactors. I guess that for many US readers such an idea would lead to many raised or frowned eyebrows. (But the US situation is almost like Mr Burns owning a single nuclear plant and nothing else and that isn't sustainable)
      I wish the European Union could be used for such endeavours. And, I have some many anarchist tendancies but when it comes to such things as this I'm a big Statist. It's like single payer healthcare, where the giant government thing is actually twice as efficient as private industry : the more "privatized" the system is, the more issues of undercoverage, surveillance and endless paperwork, effectively dozens or hundreds fiefdoms of power are created that leech off people and have the absolute word on what they can and cannot do. (I'm dwelling off-topic here to address some philosophical issue)

    65. Re:Really? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 2

      And Germany pays three times what the US pays for electricity http://shrinkthatfootprint.com...

      If the US's cost suddenly tripled, I guarantee you that rooftop solar wold take off. I looked at it, and even with a 20% subsidy from Uncle Sam, I couldn't make the numbers work. But if electricity went up even 20% in cost, it would become worth it with the 20% subsidy. Without a subsidy, electric cost would need to go up 40% to make it worth it to me.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    66. Re:Really? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Hi Coward. I may have understated it.

      http://m.spiegel.de/internatio...

      But I dont make stuff up, there are a number of solar fanboys that follow my every post and consistently fail making similar accusations. I always have a basis for my statements.

    67. Re:Really? by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1

      Um, you tell me about the coal burning plants that Germany shut down, and I'll hunt down the links for the 12 ginormous coal-burning powerplants that have opened up since 2010. The largest of these are designed to burn fucking lignite (brown coal, the dirtiest thing we have ever used for power in the history of mankind). This is not 1812, it was 2012. CO2 emissions are growing faster in Germany than anywhere else in Western Europe, while US emissions are sinking over the same timespan. Germany acts like it's some model citizen because everyone loves to hear about solar this and that, but most of their power comes from coal. Also, most of their new capacity comes from coal. Every year this decade, even the proportion of German power that has come from coal has increased. Yeah, coal. For this I hardly think they deserve any congratulations.

    68. Re:Really? by roger10-4 · · Score: 1

      Hell, silly putty started life as a failed plastic explosive.

      Uhm...no it didn't. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

    69. Re: Really? by iamhassi · · Score: 3, Informative

      Most flawed study ever. Without any evidence they automatically assumed homeowner solar usage would skyrocket from 0.2% to 10% in only 8 years? I read the study, there is no explanation of why they believe this.

      Without some amazing break through in solar power efficiency and much lower prices we will not see 10% adoption by 2022.

      I would have to pay $30,000+ for solar panels to generate the electricity I'm currently paying $200 a month for. But that fluctuates, during the winter it's $75 a month. Let's assume I average $125 a month, about $1500 a year. It would take 20 years to reach the $30,000 I would have to pay today for the solar panels, and that's assuming the panels or other equipment need no repairs for 20 years. Solar just isn't worth it yet. When 2 or 3 grand in panels can handle everything then people will consider it, but it makes no sense spending 20 years worth of electric bills all at once.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    70. Re:Really? by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1

      Soo, their CO2 output in increasing, their energy prices are highest in Europe, and a broad coalition, which includes the chancellor, is now pushing to have the program cancelled. ... SUCCESS!

    71. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So raise the subsidy. Fund it at zero cost through the Fed, like the Fed created some $3 trillion out of thin air to buy toxic assets the banks couldn't give away. No taxpayer involvement needed at all.

    72. Re:Really? by wirefarm · · Score: 1

      Buggy whip makers may have gone the way of the horse and buggy, but those who make riding crops have found themselves a niche in which to prosper.
      The trick is to adapt.
      Find a niche and scratch it...

      --
      -- My Weblog.
    73. Re:Really? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Soo, their CO2 output in increasing, their energy prices are highest in Europe, and a broad coalition, which includes the chancellor, is now pushing to have the program cancelled. ... SUCCESS!

      And how exactly is solar energy responsible for the increase in CO2 output? Please explain.

      Is it because of a basic flaw in the fossil fuel model? That unless you have the plants burning constantly, it requires more energy to stop and start them? Is that flaw the fault of solar energy? By that reasoning, we can never stop burning fossil fuels.

      Soo, the fact that this solar program has exposed a fundamental flaw in this 18th century fossil fuel energy technology, it means that solar energy is the real villain...FAILURE!

      FUD is easy, my friend. Solutions are harder. Pretending that we can just keep going along as we have been going along since the early days of the Industrial Revolution is not an option for anyone who doesn't own (or is owned by) and energy company.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    74. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See, just as I suspected. That's not taxpayer money. The "EEG Umlage" is not a tax (taxes are not bound to a particular usage). The fixed compensation is paid by the consumers as part of the electricity price and only used to pay for electricity, that which is fed into the grid by renewable energy sources. It's almost completely compensated for by the reduced wholesale price that resulted from the availability of renewable power at the electricity exchanges. Here is a nice graph to illustrate that fact. The subsidies for the nuclear power industry on the other hand are paid from taxes, which is why nobody makes a fuss about them.

    75. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      tell me that when dwindling oil is 5x the price today and you don"t have the feeder stock for future plastics

    76. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way government should work is, is this a good idea? Is it good to use renewables instead of fossil fuels? If it is a good idea, then it doesn't matter how you fund it. I say fund it at zero cost through the central bank, which merely expands its balance sheet. If you're worried about inflation, index everything (bank accounts, transfer payments, everything, as Israel does) to inflation.Then purchasing power doesn't decrease.

    77. Re:Really? by Stan92057 · · Score: 1

      Don't have a clue, your politics are very different then the USA. Here the Corporation rules. Who rules your politics?

      --
      Jack of all trades,master of none
    78. Re:Really? by Stan92057 · · Score: 2

      Is it a loss or is it a loss of profitability? I would think its the lather. So what do we do? make utility a non for profit business?? working for the consumer? i would think alot of CEOs heads would pop at that suggestion. Why do public utilities have to make billions in profits for a very tiny amount of people?

      --
      Jack of all trades,master of none
    79. Re: Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Those panel costs sound extreme. How much power do you actually use per month?

    80. Re: Really? by iamhassi · · Score: 1

      With the AC on, a lot of power, but I would need panels to cover the worse energy usage days otherwise I'm still depending on the grid and didn't really save money by using solar.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    81. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Out of nuclear, up massively on coal and gas you mean.

    82. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      No, because coal is extremely cheap to mine and burn. In totally free market, we'd probably have nothing but the most cost efficient power source for energy, and that's either coal or nuclear in places where geothermal and hydro isn't available or is tapped out. That's actually the main problem with getting rid of it. It's simply too cheap, too reliable and has too high power density.

      It's also almost the most polluting in terms of CO2, which is why we're trying to get rid of it. That and the fact that most of the mercury that forces limits on consumption of certain marine food products comes from coal burning. Acid rains and other problems appear to be mostly eliminated with modern burning and filtration techniques, but CO2 just doesn't go away.

    83. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Ah yes. This is the "will be solved very soon" (TM) problem, just like "will be solved very soon" (TM) endurance problem with wind turbine gears and other similar "will be solved very soon" (TM) renewable issues.

      Problem is, the buildup is happening NOW. While the problems are still not solved, and there's no breakthrough in sight that will actually solve it, even though the demand and heated research has been going for well over a decade now. That is my problem with the system - wind power is great if you can make it work. We don't have the technology to make it work right now. So concentrate funds on relevant research instead of massive rollout of new technology that isn't ready for rollout because key components are not ready for mass production.

    84. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you don't have any knowledge about Europe if you do not know what Eurostat is.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      It's an official EU body of European Commission. You do not get any more accurate or neutral on politics than Eurostat. It exists only to provide relevant statistics. That is why I linked directly to it - your type likes to whine about "right wing media" being pushing this message. By quoting the sources of information, I can bypass this claim completely. This is the same source from which all media, regardless of political bent typically draws its numbers when it comes to Europe, because Eurostat is extremely reliable and has statistics on wide reaching amount of issues.

      I would be amazed if Eurostat's page is actually down. Like the rest of European Commission pages, they are very resilient. So how about you try accessing it again.

    85. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I'm in agreement. I'm a big believer in State providing the basic necessities, and then getting out of the way of private interests who provide luxuries.

    86. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd be careful on that. Germany is moving to natural gas plants and has all but given up their sovereignty to Russia in return for it. If Russia turns off the taps come winter, Germany will have problems. Big problems.

    87. Re:Really? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      It is also hefty fees paid by nuclear that are used to finance renewables. Regardless of how it is paid, the cost is stll what it is...and that 100 billion Euro isnt the complete cost, part of the cost is also born by those who install solar. So, at least you agree that the cost is huge. That was my point. In the end Germans are paying the tab.

    88. Re:Really? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm familiar with Eurostat, but your links weren't working (and still aren't). Apparently, not so resilient. Maybe the EU's fossil fuel plants are still in the process of "spinning up".

      I still don't get the reference to Der Spiegel, though. Was that a mistake or a red herring?

      And I wasn't saying your statistics were right wing, just that your narrative is one that is favored by right wing. The same people who have perpetrated this disastrous "austerity" on Europeans, only to see economies tumble, recessions loom large and jobs lost, while the 1% tucks into the meal of a lifetime.

      And last of all, I'm still interested in how you believe solar panels caused a rise in emissions. Maybe they gave certain fossil energy executives and institutional shareholders gas?

      Anyone still reading this, I would encourage you to try this little experiment. Google "Germany solar police a failure" and look at the links. Whether or not you read the stories, I suggest you take a look at the advertisements on the page and/or read a little bit about the organization behind the web page. As usual with these things, there's a story behind the story.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    89. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only that, in the ACT ActewAGL encourage you to get solar power and hotwater to save you money...

      I doubt they'd be doing that if they didn't have a good plan up their sleeve for maintaining profitability, and in sure they do have a good reason for offloading day time electricity to you (it's not like actew are trying to win over customers with friendliness - they're the only choice here)

    90. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's not huge, and it's not wasted. It's the cost of the electricity we buy from people who invested in renewable energy, 24% of 600TWh a year currently. If you put solar panels on your roof now, then for energy you feed into the grid, you are guaranteed less than the average cost per kWh delivered without fees and taxes in the EU. At the moment, the subsidy consists mostly of the guarantee that you can sell at least 90% of the energy you produce, a preferential treatment if you will, not a higher price per se. Without the EEG, electricity would cost at most 2ct/kWh less. So it's not free, but it's not an outrageous price for ramping renewables up from 3% to 24% of the mix. Nuclear got more. And you've got to be kidding about nuclear paying for renewables.

    91. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      All right, let's try reposting the links as plain text in case slashdot formatting is mangling them for you:

      http://www.tradingeconomics.com/germany/co2-emissions-kt-wb-data.html Trend until 2010. Policy I'm talking about is implemented in 2008. You can see the abrupt change in trend in 2009.

      http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_PUBLIC/8-07052014-AP/EN/8-07052014-AP-EN.PDF numbers from 2012-2013
      http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_PUBLIC/8-07052014-AP/EN/8-07052014-AP-EN.PDF numbers from 2011-2012

      Must the be notoriously unreliable wind power outage causing links to break, har har. Oh look, a cheap shot that actually works in the context -_-

      P.S. Why are you talking about random drivel and then insisting that I "believe it"? Attempt at a strawman argument?

      P.P.S. Since you are clearly unable to use google, here's the article. Found easily by searching "germany energiewende der spiegel". Google-fu is hard, I know.

      http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/high-costs-and-errors-of-german-transition-to-renewable-energy-a-920288.html

    92. Re:Really? by icebike · · Score: 1

      With a large enough grid, you can always find an outlet for excess power and you can always borrow power. As a utility, you might not want to do that, but we empower utilities to serve us, not the other way around.

      A agree we need a sponge to sop up the excess power, but I suspect storage makes more sense than more industry to start and stop on a whim. That approach just moves the problem around, from the utility to some other industry. We can put it in batteries, pump water up-hill to reservoirs that we can quickly release into turbines. What ever, as long as it doesn't push the problem to some other industry.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    93. Re:Really? by Mr.CRC · · Score: 1

      What is it with you people who take a situation where a market failure is obviously and explicitly the result of government regulation, and call it "de-regulating ... gone too far?"

      I've always known that the biggest obstacle to adopting sustainable energy sources would be government regulations protecting entrenched interests.

    94. Re:Really? by GLMDesigns · · Score: 2

      Is this a serious post, just trolling or some misguided "true believer". There's a law of supply and demand to everything including energy. One sector may do well at another's expense (which is why one shouldn't want government messing around with the economy). Big oil may suffer by this (or not) but other companies such as Tesla and other battery / storage device makers will profit. If Exxon and the Koch Brothers are smart they will be making money with or without oil. If broccoli farming made more money than oil then they would be broccoli farmers.

      --
      If you're scared of your govt then you need to further restrict its powers
      Vote 3rd Party in 2016 and beyond
    95. Re:Really? by Euler · · Score: 1

      Yes, this is what happened in New York State. Power producers are separated from power delivery. But in today's global (corporate) economy, both entities in my area are owned by the same parent company which is actually not based in the USA. Oh, there are 3rd party suppliers that, in theory, are competitive. But trust me, there is no savings for the consumer...

      Plus, they are basically guaranteed a small profit as a public entity. And I don't really care too much, I pay a modest amount to have convenient service.

      There is basically no way the utilities are worried unless every home and factory goes off the grid with no backup connection whatsoever.

      Individual power plants could be rendered obsolete, but that has been happening since forever. The idea that solar will displace coal/nuclear/etc. is silly unless it can get a lot cheaper. Work out the true cost of solar in terms of storage capacity to actually replace traditional base loads. Solar might add more capacity, but industry and society won't stand for a scarcity of electricity when they need it. I just hope for the day that fusion can operate cheaper than all...

    96. Re:Really? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

      There's a law of supply and demand to everything including energy.

      It's a law the same way "unintended consequences" is a law. Or Godwin's Law is a law. It's truth until it's not.

      Economic "laws" are not like the laws of physics. Economics isn't even a science, being so soft as to be less rigorous than parapsychology. Economics is dogma, always with an agenda.

      Coincidentally, here's something interesting I read today about this very subject:

      https://fixingtheeconomists.wo...

         

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    97. Re: Really? by wheeda · · Score: 1

      Let me guess, you don't have very much money and you aren't sure why. But the cause of your lack of money couldn't be because you believe everything about economics is a fraud.

    98. Re:Really? by Sqr(twg) · · Score: 2

      That would require spending 5-10 times as much money on batteries to support the solar cells as you spent on the cells themselves.

      In most places it would be cheaper to pump water up into a dam somewhere and then use a turbine to recover the electricity when needed, but that would also at least triple the cost of electricity.

      The currently cheapest solution (where there's not enough hydro-power) is to have fossil fuel plants running as "spinning reserve". And that's the way it's going to be until prices of fossil fuels tipple, or we tax them to achieve that effect.

    99. Re:Really? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      The funny thing is they are allegedly libertarian yet show time and again they are willing to take in millions of dollars from the government and in this case, prevent individuals from becoming independent.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    100. Re: Really? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      Those prices are reasonable without government subsidies (in fact, the price is often $45,000 to $50,000 with inverters and batteries).

      $30,000 is probably grid tied, no inverters or batteries.

      But it is getting cheaper rapidly- the problem is that german utilities have bought up all the cheap supply for multiple years in the future.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    101. Re:Really? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      The tricky bit is this.

      If 80% of the coal costs 25 cents/kw to extract.
      10% costs 35 cents/kw to extract.
      10% costs 55 cents/kw to extract.

      Then all of it is priced at 55 cents/kw in short term contracts and various prices closer to 55 cents/kw for long term contracts.

      Sooooo

      When solar wipes out 20% of demand.. All the coal needed only costs 25 cents/kw and the more expensive mines are shut down. Some can be reopened later and some will fill with water/go bad in various ways and be essentially lost.

      So suddenly, solar that was kicking ass competing with 55 cent/kw prices is over priced compared to 25 cents/kw prices. And the early adopters find themselves paying more than the going rate for power and feel like they made a mistake (when actually they just created the lower prices by reducing demand).

      Solar continues to drop but batteries and inverters do not (and as demand rises, prices for batteries and inverters will probably go up unlike solar cells which have a strong downward bias). So grid tied is more likely to continue to be the preferred model over battery and inverter.

      Meanwhile, over on the utility side... they previously may have paid 50 million to set up the lines but they charged people in hourly rates. So as electrical usage drops, expect to the see the fixed line costs and maintenance costs to be broken out. Which will also impact the case for grid tied solar power. (instead of paying $50 to $175, you might pay $50 to $125-- with a base charge of $50/month for lines in there instead of $15/month).

      I own one solar panel. It appears to save me about $40 per year. at that rate, it will pay for itself in 25 years if it doesn't break first (which is likely). But it was sort of a hobby purchase. It has it's own microinverter and plugs in to a normal socket and runs the meter backwards/slows it down.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    102. Re: Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It still sounds like a lot. If you look at the prices of Chinese-made solar panels on Alibaba - i.e. pretty much directly from manufacturer - they're under $1/watt even for the most efficient monocrystalline ones (in fact, most are about $0.7/watt). Now granted, this is price per "ideal watt", but even if you're looking at actual output at 50%, it's still over 15 kW for $30k worth of batteries. Which is a lot, even with AC and all.

      Or do solar companies in US resell these at insane margins?

    103. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the AC on, a lot of power, but I would need panels to cover the worse energy usage days otherwise I'm still depending on the grid and didn't really save money by using solar.

      I suspect you could use the solar panels to properly shade your house and windows (without blocking views if you are strategic about it). This would generate a return even if not used to generate power.

      This is just a suspicion based on how often people just let suns bake their houses and then rely on AC to cool them.

      captcha: redneck - I suspect they get the proper use of shade.

    104. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that's a great idea except that there is a fundamental price limit enforced by the price of off-grid battery systems. At the point where the peak power (generally evening outside of PV generation time) price goes high enough to make those off-grid batteries viable (they're a bit too costly at present) your customers then tell you to get f*cked. At that point your electricity company hits the death spiral.

    105. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just look at how it has gone in Australia - PV is massive.

    106. Re: Really? by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      http://www.harborfreight.com/4...

      Harbor Freight wants $200 for that 45 watt solar panel, which is presently at a discount from $300. At $0.7/Watt it should cost $31.5 instead of $200.

    107. Re: Really? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Wow. And reviews cite "cheap material" and "wears out quickly", at that.

      The next obvious question is, why are these guys and their ilk still in business, with price gouging like that?

    108. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Short answer: Yes.

      Longer answer: instability of wind and solar means you either have grid that has rolling blackouts several times a day, or you have 100% spinning reserve. Spinning reserve is mostly coal and natural gas.

      As a result, whenever you add wind or solar to the network, you have to have a reliable burner based power plant with turbine running at operational speed and in phase with network ready to pick up the slack the moment wind blows too hard and it gets hit with more load from the network.

    109. Re:Really? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      As a result, whenever you add wind or solar to the network, you have to have a reliable burner based power plant with turbine running at operational speed and in phase with network ready to pick up the slack the moment wind blows too hard and it gets hit with more load from the network.

      You make a very good case for more investment in the infrastructure so we're not saddled with an energy source from the 18th century and an energy infrastructure from the 19th.

      That solar is a failure, not so much.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    110. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not saying my idea is immediately effective, but I predict that community-scale energy production will be the way of the future. Imagine an isolated residential community that currently runs a diesel, oil or gas-fired power station. They can easily augment their fossil fuel station with wind or solar and balance the load as required.

      I honestly expect that this will start to happen across the country. Smaller, distributed power generation will be teamed with renewables and the load balancing will occur in a more symbiotic manner.

      Of course there's a loss in efficiency as the power plants are scaled down, I get that, but it will be countered somewhat by transmission losses. On top of this, we may (hope?) see CO2-neutral options for the base load generation: hyrdo-dams or geothermal where possible.

      If we had reliable hydrogen storage we could use that as energy storage, which would also mean that community-scale power plants running on hydrogen would be very very safe and clean: ideal for distribution throughout society. I do realise that hydrogen storage is not currently up to scratch, and it's just an energy transport and storage medium, it would still need to be generated somehow (large, central nuclear would handle it, and ultimately renewables).

      So my dream?

      A community chooses the renewable power generation options that suit it best: wind, solar, geo, hydro, etc... and these facilities are built, with extra capacity. A storage medium is chosen, again, based on location: batteries, flywheel, hydro, hydrogen, etc... and this is "charged" when the renewables are running strong, and used to offset the times the renewables are running low.

      Could it ever happen?

    111. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The costs of the grid and maintaining the generation capacity necessary to cover the times that the renewables don't provide enough electricity have to be paid for by those who are connected to the grid system. So of course they are going charge people for that. If you want a reliable supply of electricity that is the only option currently. Once sufficiently cheap enough storage capacity becomes available, then the game changes.

    112. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference between what Barny said and what you said is that you think prices will drop when demand drops. He is saying daytime prices will stay the same while night time prices increase. This isn't exactly supply and demand, but supply and lack of demand. Even if they start to charge day-time prices at night, AC and electronic usage is low at night, so they will need to charge even more than daytime to keep profits up. It's a problem and not simply supply and demand.

    113. Re:Really? by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      One would think that this makes perfect sense. How is it "passing the loss on to customers"? It used to be that night-time electricity was cheaper because the supply was largely flat, while the demand got lower at night. If the day-time electricity production gets to be largely covered by PV, the whole thing may either turn around or at least shift toward day-time electricity being cheaper simply because of basic economy principles, not because of some malicious intent.

      A crude measure.

      Pricing = (sales -costs) plus markup. Costs don't change, and if dividends per share remain flat, then sales prices have to rise.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    114. Re:Really? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      As it was explained to me by the engineering dept. at SoCalEdison, the more power I use, the more it costs them, so they'd rather I used less, and if I used none at all that would be perfect.

      Incidentally Sam's Club has started putting little wind generators on the lampposts in their parking lots. Manager at the one I frequented in SoCal told me this had already dropped their power bill by 5%, which is significant if you're in retail (even bulk-wholesale-priced retail).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    115. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How true. They will just adjust what they pay you and raise the connection fees etc. Half my bill each month is non-usage costs.

      The only way to get away from that vicious circle is to go completely off grid but then you'll need a bunch of batteries to keep at least 3 days energy stored or a backup generator. They simply make it a lot more expensive for you like they always do.

    116. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IN US the utilities are regulated to buy consumer generated power and if they played your game you could simply sell your excess to your neighbors or charge batteries for use in powering cars by '22 electric cars will be more common

    117. Re:Really? by macpacheco · · Score: 1

      In another 10 years solar panel prices will drop at least another 60-70%. At that point not going solar will be stupid even without any subsidies (except for feed in tariffs). And if the govt cuts the feed in tariffs, by then it will be economical for residential and commercial users to deploy battery energy storage such that they will be energy independent at least for half of the year, with FIT consumers will be able to over install solar panels such that they produce twice as much electricity in the summer than they consume and can sell their surplus production when they can get the best deal.

      In the end, all electrical utilities will be forced to separate generation from transmission prices so the FIT matches wholesale generation prices. The transmission fee (usually a fixed month amount) might go up, but if it goes too far up, people might might go off grid even in urban zones.

      No matter how you look at it, solar in Florida, Texas, southern half of California solar will rule.
      And that is a good thing. The pity is the rejection of nuclear power up north where solar is useless in the winter. But still solar will be useful in the summer, when AC usage drive electricity demand up.

      However we need a solution for heating in the winter without CO2 emissions, and solar can't fix that. Wind is too intermittent. The grid needs nuclear + solar + hydro + geothermal as its foundation. Wind, not a big fan, except for sites where wind produces reliably on a daily basis (vast majority of wind investment in North America and Europe is not on sites that produce reliably, with huge ups and downs).

    118. Re:Really? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Most of the electric grid systems are upgraded as needed,

      In the US "as needed" means 20 years after needed. How is it in Germany?

    119. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Our energy generation system is from current century, as is our infrastructure. Both are century-level projects that are updated as we go along. Energy infrastructure from 19th century was a work by extremely specialized people who were always working to try to predict power peaks and fall-off from things like scheduled power plant repairs, ends of workday, ends of large public gatherings like sport matches, and so on.

      Nowadays it's a complex modern automation directly hooked into the power plants and grid substations with notable predictive and learning algorithms.

      The problem is that even that is simply insufficient to carry completely unreliable power sources. Because these power sources are not ready yet to move into mass production.

    120. Re:Really? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      There's enough solar and wind to power the world. Anyone who says there isn't is a liar. If every house in the US were to have its roof covered in PV, the results would generate more power in a day than used in a day in those houses. If every building were covered, it'd generate more power than used everywhere in the US. Do the roads, and you'd have enough for 10 years from now, with power usage increasing at current rate, and everyone switching to electric cars.

      The power is there. We just refuse to use it. Wind and hydro and other renewables would help cover off times, and there are a variety of batteries already in use around the globe (the hydro plant I toured in China stores excess baseline generated overnight for use for the next day's peak, but it could easily run the other way around).

    121. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      If this was correct, you wouldn't be typing this on a computer tied to a functional grid, but tied to a diesel generator on a separate circuit.

      See, the capability of grid to deliver electricity successfully and reliably is the measure used to measure grid's capability to function at any current time frame. Not capability to support new and completely unreliable and not yet ready power generation methods.

    122. Re:Really? by duck_rifted · · Score: 1

      And meanwhile, they could think like actual capitalists and...

      1. Invest in solar equipment themselves
      2. Lease it to customers so that some dollar amount of their light bill is permapaid month by month
      3. Make that dollar amount less than the value of the energy generated per equipment set
      4. Set the lease terms so that an initial investment brings revenue while ensuring a ROI for the customer
      5. Profit while profiting on profits

      Growth, growth, growth. Energy company CEOs have become so set in their ways that they now caricature themselves as too corrupt and incompetent for their fiduciary duties. They would rather maximize their consumer-screwing potential than profits, and this is an absolute plague on more than one market today. These people need to be taught to make money on new formulas that involve more thought and insight than just being lazy and milking the unwashed masses.

      Solar does not have to hurt utility companies. It could make them more profitable than ever before. Common sense says this can go two ways, in fact.

      If they don't learn to think like they're businesses and they continue to try and prove how they're simply royalty who doesn't have to be a part of anything, then solar use will continue to climb, and their efforts to combat it will only forestall the inevitable: They will continue to hike rates until consumers either fall into the category of being off the grid or don't have service. Where will their profits be then?

      These companies are so blinded by sheer entitlement and complacency that it's almost going to be humorous watching half of them fail for it. Or at least it would be if it didn't mean that many will inevitably end up without service.

    123. Re:Really? by duck_rifted · · Score: 1

      I can't buy it. Instead of taking steps to ensure their continued profitability and existence, these companies bribe legislators and constantly increase rates to continue business as usual. They're entitled, complacent, and borderline incompetent. Out with the old, in with the new. We need a generation of energy company CEOs who don't have their heads stuck up the past.

    124. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even grid-tie requires inverters. It must be art enough to sync with grid power.

    125. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Elon will win BECAUSE of supply and demand. He found a market that wants what he is selling. He is not selling on price, but on cool, environment, desire, not need.

    126. Re:Really? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Not at the moment, but sometimes I do. All it takes is a frosty power line in upstate NY to kill power for millions for days. That doesn't sound state of the art, but archaic and barely adequate.

    127. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      This is literally what you call "having it so good, you don't know what having it bad means", aka "first world problems".

      If you want to understand what "grid twenty years behind the need" means, I recommend taking a look at a country like India.

    128. Re: Really? by lazybeam · · Score: 1

      I've had my PV since 2010 back with maximum rebate, and got solar hot water at the same time. It has well and truly paid for itself already. Being in Queensland solar is a no-brainer!

      --
      --
      no sig for you. come back one year.
    129. Re:Really? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Transmission is fine in India. The generation is insufficient. Since people profit from generation in the US, it's up to date. Transmission not as much, so it's not up to date.

    130. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      You really don't understand the difference, do you?

      Spinning reserve, that important and expensive part of generation is part of grid management. Attempting to separate it from grid management is like attempting to claim that your car is fine, it's just that the oil isn't there.

    131. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot to mention that here in Australia the electricity providers also charge "Line Access" or "Network Access" fees to people installing solar panel systems that feed power back into the network. They claim it's because it complicates network infrastructure and maintenance (which has a grain of truth) but in reality it's because they want to gouge back some of the money that they're no longer getting from their old customers.

    132. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would guess that's how the law is written in Germany (not everywhere, there are several other models you could investigate) because the government decided, as a matter of policy, to look for a low-cost way to encourage more rooftop solar installations. That law won't stay on the books forever.

      The Australian approach is that the solar owner gets to sell surplus power back to the grid, and buys their own power from the grid when they need to. That's a fair and symmetrical arrangement, except for the bit where the price paid for the surplus power was (for a time) hugely inflated. Of course the grid still needs to pay for its own upkeep and reserve, but that's what standing charges are for.

    133. Re:Really? by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Avoiding the supply charge, those cables in the street is also require, otherwise they will continually ramp up the supply charge and this affects the poor far more than it does the rich.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    134. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spain tried it, gave subsidy's and is now fucked.

      So congratulations on not checking what has already happened...

    135. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone who quotes the mad left ThinkProgress as a reputable source of information is either a dimwit or a fuckwit.

      I go for fuckwit.

    136. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sounds like when the utility scale batteries start hitting the market, german companies will be throwing fat stacks buying them up.

    137. Re:Really? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Of course. Just like when fusion power starts hitting the market, French companies will be throwing fat stacks buying them up.

    138. Re: Really? by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "Without some amazing break through in solar power efficiency and much lower prices we will not see 10% adoption by 2022."

      The issue isn't so much "solar efficiency" anymore, so much as storage technology.

      Forcing utilities to accept solar/wind power at fixed prices and not compensating them for the cost of having to keep backup power sources ready to roll for when those resources aren't generating full capacity is going to generate a significant backlash. Utilities are resorting to paying people NOT to connect their windpower to the grid in Europe.

      At some point the subsidies are going to go away. At that point Solar/wind/tidal are going to look extremely expensive, even compared to old oil-burning plants.

    139. Re:Really? by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right, but the brainwashed folks will never accept this. The truth is that the greed of the politicians has proven time and time again to do far more damage than the greed of the "evil corporations" they pretend to be saving us from. But the politicians keep winning, because they can lie, play to people's emotions, make up big, bad horrible bogeymen -- Whereas corporations who lie are immediately crucified in the media.

      Politicians tell incredible lies to pad their pockets at the expense of others - and continue to get a pass.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    140. Re:Really? by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      You need to read about Germany outside of the places you have been. The last article in Der Speigal said, and I quote "Electricity is becoming a luxury good in Germany" - Precisely because of the foolish notions you're spouting here.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    141. Re:Really? by Agripa · · Score: 1

      But at the same time, when renewables do produce, coal, natural gas and nuclear plants cannot sell electricity (not because they don't produce energy, but because laws ban them from doing so!) and are forced to actually pay people who take their electricity (again, grid balance!)

      This has been happening in Texas do to excessive wind power for the transmission capacity.

  2. Here We Go Again . . . by tgeek · · Score: 1

    One of the main purposes of the study was to evaluate measures that could be pursued by utilities and regulators to reduce the financial impacts of distributed photovoltaics

    Another effort by the government to prop up an industry that could be be obsoleted, or at least significantly diminished, by technology.

    1. Re:Here We Go Again . . . by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 2

      The title says a lot. After the billions of dollars spent in the US to subsidize solar over the last decade, even with the largest subsidies and tax gifts ever provided to any energy source by a wide margin, only 0.2% of our electricity comes from rooftop solar. Its not even a blip. At least wind energy can show some real progress and contribution.

      And their is great unfairness of the residential solar subsidies. Lower income people can't participate, because they can't afford them without either taking on more debt or getting caught in lease deals that have a host of problems. People who are living in the most energy efficient manner, those is apartment buildings, can't take advantage. The tax gifts and forced sales are gifts to the mostly middle and upper class, and the rest of us get to pay over 1/3 of their power bill. And those same people will complain when they are asked to pay for a percent of grid maintenance they they need to back up their solar systems.

  3. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  4. Unhealthy competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It will be banned.

  5. In Soviet USA by MarcosYXY · · Score: 1

    They treat you like slave who should not ask for anything. Just work for nothing, pay monthly fees to your lords and STFU.

    1. Re:In Soviet USA by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      While I too get frustrated with some of the things going on I have to say your description of reality is vastly twisted to the negative. Things largely are not so dire.

    2. Re:In Soviet USA by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Sane electricity prices would include a base rate for infrastructure and reserve capacity, and a cost per usage. Most people just pay the usage fee. I

      It makes sense to me, if I have a PV roof, I still pay a base rate to the electric company to maintain the lines so I can have electricity when my roof is not generating.

      You, on the other hand, should see someone about all that irrationality.

    3. Re:In Soviet USA by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Isn't that exactly how it's computed, though? E.g my electric bill has a "basic charge", which I assume is exactly what you're describing - the fee that goes towards maintaining the network. Then on top of that, they charge by kWh.

  6. Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Bruce66423 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Utilities are boring because they do a simple job which generates small but predictable profits. Therefore investors put their money into them in the expectation that they will remain boring.

    When a new development comes along that destroys their business model, one of two things will happen; they will increase their prices, or they will go out of business. Note that 'the government taking them over' is a subset of 'they will increase their prices'. The service that they provide; a reliable baseload supply and a safe network to distribute electricity HAVE TO BE PAID FOR. At the moment those costs are hidden in the average cost of a kWh. If private solar power reduces the average demand some of the time, the average cost of a kWh will have to be increased, or the other features be recognised and paid for.

    Ladies and gentlemen, there is no such thing as a free lunch, despite politicians pretending otherwise for several thousand years.

    1. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Organic+Brain+Damage · · Score: 1

      If utilities increase their prices, they'll make solar more attractive and increase the rate at which they go out of business.

    2. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 4, Informative

      All the utilities have been privatised in the UK. One thing that didn't happen was prices going down. In fact they've been rising way beyond the rate of inflation ever since.

    3. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The very same thing has happened in New Zealand. We were promised lower prices through competition, and instead we've ended up with large yearly increases far beyond the rate of inflation.

    4. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Culture20 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Not if you're legally required to use some power from the grid or face an immediately levied tax (it's not a fine!). I could even see some rationale behind it: something about national emergency preparedness, keeping the grid working, and jobs. Battery banks beyond a certain size could be made illegal for home use (just like rainwater storage in the western USA) to encourage uploading excess to the grid and require pulling from the grid in dark hours (the electrical companies become flywheel companies). Everyone pays more to the utilities. That's nature's way.

    5. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's because energy companies in the UK struggle to make a profit on residential business - take the bill I have in front of me from EDF Energy, it breaks down the £57.85 charge for gas and electric covering the period of 01/08/2014 to 08/09/2014 as follows:

      Electricity: 5% VAT, 12% Environmental and social obligations, 17% Operating costs, 24% Network costs, 42% Wholesale costs, 0% Profit.

      Gas: 5% VAT, 5% Environmental and social obligations, 16% Operating costs, 20% Network costs, 54% Wholesale costs, 0% Profit.

      Their electricity sources are broken down as: 17% coal, 73.7% nuclear, 8.3% renewable, 1% other.

      What people fail to realise (or just outright ignore) about pre-privatisation is that the costs were hidden and subsidised by the Treasury.

    6. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Connie_Lingus · · Score: 1

      exactly, because market competition 99 times outta 100 increases efficiencies, and all that energy chasing capital, in the end, keeps your monthly bills down.

      where are those incentives when government takes over? that a bunch of nameless faceless bureaucrats who have no skin in the game are concerned about costs?

      how does that work?

       

      --
      never bring a twinkie to a food fight.
    7. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jeez, who could have seen that coming?

    8. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      You seem to have understood the GP backwards.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
    9. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      /offtopic/ another thing people didn't see coming was that when your house is on fire and the firemen see a PV system on the house, they like to fight the fire from afar rather than get close and really try to put it out and get electrocuted

    10. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually it's far worse. Right now, users on the same electric grid as the solar user are directly subsidising the solar producer through higher utility payments. This is due to inherent instability of solar production and spikes this causes, which require more complex grid management to keep the grid stable. Which means more costs, which are paid through price on delivered electricity, which is lower to the solar producer.

      This is already the case in Australia, where this has been decried as a direct subsidy from the poor to the rich (poor generally can't afford solar while rich can, and poor are basically paying for solar panels of the rich through their higher utility payments).

      I suspect that even through pundits will resist, the real costs of having residential solar hooked to the grid will be pushed back onto solar users so they don't free ride off other people's backs by instituting some sort of "grid stability fee" for anyone who has solar hooked to the grid.

    11. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /offtopic/ another thing people didn't see coming was that when your house is on fire and the firemen see a PV system on the house, they like to fight the fire from afar rather than get close and really try to put it out and get electrocuted

      Can you substantiate a single case of this actually happening? I'm otherwise interested since I used to know a couple of volunteer firefighters (those guys have some serious guts) and when I asked them about what they dealt with they talked about dealing with structure fires, forest fires, rescues, accidents, jaws-of-life, hazmat of various kinds, etc. Hell one time they were called in to knock down a wall so a 1,000 pound fat guy who needed medical attention could be brought out of his house (he was a long-term shut-in and physically could not get past the door). But i guess solar installations are too rare in the area for them to mention that? Do they have a risk of electrocution that's any greater than the standard grid hookup?

    12. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      So where are they getting their profits from???? its probably their inflated wholesale and network costs that they charge to themselves

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    13. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting that gov taking over raises prices.
      Right now the cheapest electricity in USA are gov owned. In Colorado, we were one of the cheapest in the nation and had great infrastructurr when we had public service company. Then we allowed them to merge with Xcel, a private company. Now electricity is slightly above average and the grid network has gone to hell.

    14. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      The problem is that renewable tech is still not there yet. To try to run the utility grid with renewables is unworkable at this time so how do you manage to integrate them with old reliable coal and nuclear? The choice of most of the green segment seems to be to pass the costs to all the other customers of the electric company and drive power costs higher. Understandably this will upset the other customers who have a finite amount of money to spend.

    15. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by amiga3D · · Score: 3, Informative

      I don't know about the UK but in the US we have a curious blend of government and private public utilities companies. They are supposedly private but they are government regulated complete with a monopoly over their assigned area. The amount of profit they are allowed to make is also regulated. If they make too much then that money is refunded to customers and if they come up short that money is levied against the customers. Not really capitalism at all.

    16. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by dbIII · · Score: 1

      If you are going to use Australia as an example you should look at the "poles and wires" overpricing scandal to get some perspective on the issue. A utility can build unused equipment and charge that on to the customer at a profit (ie. the fee goes up for new equipment and that raise in fees not only covers the construction but increases the profit substantially) due to a local monopoly and regulation being little other than a barrier of entry to new players. There were a couple of court cases in N.S.W. about equipment built and not connected to the grid but local customers expected to pay extra for it, plus padding.

      Prices were soaring long before solar panels were popular and the increasing take up is more a consequence of the price than a driver of it. Don't take my word for it, there's plenty of information out there if you actually take a look and you don't have to a be an ex power industry person like me to understand it.

    17. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by chihowa · · Score: 1

      ...and the grid network has gone to hell.

      I'm glad that it's not just me who thinks so. I'm installing a PV setup at home just to have reliable electric service.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    18. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by InterGuru · · Score: 1

      When I look at my electric bill about 1/3 the cost is the grid, the rest is energy. If you have solar panels you are still using the grid to both send and receive energy even as you save the utility from generating energy.

    19. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      Ladies and gentlemen, there is no such thing as a free lunch, despite politicians pretending otherwise for several thousand years.

      But we have made lunches much cheaper over the years, which is similar to adding several free lunches. Used to be if you wanted light at night you had to gather olives and squeeze the oil out of them, and keep refilling your lamp, or similar for candles. Now you can buy a solar panel to recharge the battery over the day and power your light at night, which ends up being so much cheaper and more convenient.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    20. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by HornWumpus · · Score: 3, Informative

      The world has changed. Power pools. Generators bid (typically incremental cost) power into the pool which stacks up the bids and tells the cheapest to run and everybody else not to. They all get paid the price of the highest bid run that period.

      This is a vast oversimplification. Long term deals from ratebase (the old way) are still honored with exceptions (usually transparent incestous deals to shift profit from regulated utilities to pure open market utilities. e.g. PG&E is banned from long term deals because they just aren't trustworthy, and ran out of second chances, no matter how many drinks they buy.)

      I was involved in writing trading/dispatch floor software for many of the players in these pools.

      It's a decent compromise between regulated monopoly and an open market. Highly regulated and transparent market. Not a huge burden on small players. There are no tiny players.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    21. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Ask them the first thing they do when they get to a structure fire. It is 'turn off the electricity and gas'.

      However building codes are not static. Inverters typically don't run unless their is grid power. This also protects linemen. If they shut off power at the pole they damn well don't want your rooftop power to energize the line.

      The downside is that grid connected solar doesn't act as backup power for safety reasons.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    22. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      'Ratebase utilities can make a profit remodeling the company presidents office' (or anything else designated a legitimate cost of business).

      When a piece of equipment is critical and has a two year lead time, you need a backup. No idea if that's the case in NSW.

      It's been 10 years, I thought the S. Australia/Victoria power pool was going to grow.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    23. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the industry paid the price for it aka solar boom in the Au...

    24. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by kenh · · Score: 1

      Spreading the cost of your lunch over a group of people that do not share in your lunch isn't cheaper, it's cheaper to your - when you factor in the cost of administering the spreading of the cost and the oversight of the subsidized lunch you are enjoying at a discount, the net total cost is actually greater...

      --
      Ken
    25. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What you horrendously fail to realize, or just outright lie and omit, is that these for profit energy companies that make 'no profit' still seem to pay CEOs and top management millions of dollars in salaries. There's profit, they just pretend there isn't, and leverage against themselves with loans and subsidies to milk as much money as possible, since they know the power must stay on and the government will continue to subsidize. It's a fucked up shell game they play and it fucks everyone of their customers.

      Hollywood movies bring in hundreds of millions of dollars and yet their creative accounting claims they lose money on almost every film. It's the same exact bullshit on a smaller microeconomic scale but within a larger macroeconomic shell to funnel profits from.

    26. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      How does a one specific scandal related to a completely different issue address the issue I raise?

      Oh wait, poster:dblll. Deflectionary tactics. Yellow press style write up.

      Bah.

    27. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      There is a way to avoid it, but it's problematic so people typically don't use it. Grid separation.

      You put your solar panels on separate circuit and install hardware that doesn't allow for Panel > Grid power flow.

      The problem is that hardware is expensive and solar power without net metering is prohibitively expensive. The entire point of making solar power affordable in many places has been net metering, but that was done without considering the consequences for the utilities. And as a result, in places like Australia, poor ended up footing the bill for the rich.

    28. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Bengie · · Score: 1

      Not if the law states you can't have more renewables than base load, which is required for stable power. So long as we can't store renewable energy, we cannot have more renewable than fossil fuel.

    29. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2

      What you seem to have missed from my original point is that I specifically said "on residential business". EDF made money last year from its commercial business (selling to high consumption businesses) and selling power from its generation side to the grid.

      If they lose money in the residential market, why shouldn't residential rates go up? That was the point of the post I replied to - rates going up.

    30. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Inflated wholesale? You mean the market that Ofgem has said there is plenty of competition in and is working fine?

      Network costs are pretty much the same for every energy company, since both the gas and electricity networks are independent of the generation and consumption side of the business, so no energy company can inflate their costs there...

    31. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 2

      Pre-privatisation they didn't charge VAT on fuel or for environmental and social obligations and the network was also owned by the state rather than by the Germans so you can remove all those from your calculation. What costs were hidden and subsidised? From what I remember the utilities made quite a lot of money for the state and should not have been sold off at all, or at least for a great deal more money than they were.

    32. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      They are regulated heavily because when they were first privatised they hiked prices enormously and the government of the time had to take action to stop them screwing their captive market.

    33. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It's been 10 years, I thought the S. Australia/Victoria power pool was going to grow.

      That's assuming a expanding manufacturing economy instead of a quarry and service industries for the quarriers.

      The northern N.S.W. thing was pure padding and didn't match their demand forecasts. It turns out that such a thing is supposed to be widespread but the example I gave has been through the court

    34. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      What the fuck are you talking about? Our system has six major players and is still shit with double digit price increases every year and poor customer service. It's like a government utility except any profits made leave the country.

    35. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      At the moment those costs are hidden in the average cost of a kWh.

      Speak for yourself. My electric co-op charges me an explicit infrastructure charge, itemized separately from my usage-based power consumption bill. It's a flat rate. It's 50 cents per day. And before you fluff up and fume and fuss, that is a sustainable price. It has not changed in over a decade. It is also the correct price. It's a co-op. I'm a part owner. I attend the annual meetings when I can, and always read the financial statements they publish every year. I know every detail of the financial workings of the co-op. I can go to their home office and read the contracts, if it suits me. I'm an owner.

      50 cents per meter per day is sufficient to keep an award-winning grid in good repair. And this is a rural grid too, with a relatively low density of meters per mile of wire. State law forbids co-ops to operate inside of incorporated city limits, one of the finer examples of crony capitalism to be found. Only the for-profit corporations are allowed to serve cities, with their much higher density of meters per mile of wire. So not only is my co-op sustainably servicing my house for 50 cents per day, they're doing it while lugging power across mostly empty rural counties. If they were allowed to serve all of the residents, that fee would go down, since the average number of meters per mile would go up.

      No, the government does not need to take them over. The customers do. They simply won't be profitable anymore. Power will still be delivered, the lights will still stay on, average outage frequency and duration will go down (I have numbers to prove it), and fat cats will no longer get fatter at the expense of the poor and middle class. Oh what a crying shame.

      No, it's not a free lunch. But it is lunch money.

    36. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the universe itself is the ultimate free lunch. Dark energy too has been so described. In economics, banks expand their balance sheets to create a free lunch:

      From Economics of Money and Banking, Part I, Lecture 5-5 "Correspondent Banking Bilateral Balances", from about 5:11 to 5:32:

      Bank A is saying "I owe you a thousand dollars", Bank B is saying "No I owe you a thousand dollars." They both owe each other a thousand dollars. So they've created these deposits from thin air, they're just a swap of IOUs; they've expanded their balance sheets - both of them. How can that possibly do anything? You know - there's no such thing as a free lunch, it seems like it couldn't possibly do anything.

      But it does.

      Government created the first free lunch when Alexander Hamilton started running a National Debt by assuming the states' war debts in the very first administration. Conservatives were predicting doom and gloom within a few years then, yet standards of living have risen for over 200 years.

      Utitlities should be a public good, not a profit-making entity. The government can and should create money (or borrow at zero cost through the Fed) to provide citizens with power. Profit creates perverse incentives, like garbage companies raising their rates when people use less garbage. Government should override these sociopathic tendencies of market signals.

      Using all caps, as the parent post did ("HAVE TO BE PAID FOR"), is a sign that the argument is emotional, not rational. Free lunches exist all over. People try to deny them by yelling. Don't get distracted by them.

    37. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What people fail to realise (or just outright ignore) about pre-privatisation is that the costs were hidden and subsidised by the Treasury."

      What is wrong with that model? The government can get funding at zero cost through the Fed. Why shouldn't the government use created money to provide cheap electricity to its people? How is that not in the General Welfare?

      The profit motive introduces perverse incentives, such as we're seeing in this article. Government should not be concerned with profit, but with the General Welfare. Government is a hedge against the moral hazards of the free market.

    38. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many Utilities have a good track record of customer service. Many goverment owned utilities provide competitive service. Solar, wind and batteries may ease grid pressures. Utilities are building out solar. Minnesota's metering formula should allow this all work. We really shouldn't prop up fossil energy. It's one of those cases where Koch Brother ideaology is in conflict with there own bottom line. They seem to be more interested in their bottom line than the ideaology they espouse.

    39. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      You have it backwards. It was run by the government but then when the market was allowed to take over, it got more expensive and continues to rise faster than inflation.

    40. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      Of course, solar users also ease loads on the grid allowing power companies to avoid buying power at peak rates or having to build more generating capacity. You didn't think power companies ran PSAs about saving energy because they thought it would be cool to make less money, did you?

    41. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      This part of impact is a rounding error in comparison to fluctuations caused by all the solar users suddenly spiking up and down in production.

    42. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who's paying? The Fed can expand its balance sheet to create money, and pay for everything. Why should money be kept artificially scarce?

      Even the quantity theory of money shows that if you raise the money supply in lock step with prices, purchasing power remains constant. So to insure against inflation, index everything (bank accounts, transfer payments, everything, as Israel does) to inflation.

    43. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      Solar doesn't suddenly spike. You make it sound like outside looks like a disco. The 'spike' a typical home might produce from clouds in front of the sun are unlikely to be as severe as the A/C coming on (which is all at once and with an inrush current, no less).

    44. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Except that just like wind, it does. Mainly because producers on the same circuit tend to all flare up at once when sun shines, and stop sending large amount of power into the grid when it goes behind the cloud.

      Wind has the same problem but only worse when wind exceeds maximum allowed speed. Turbine's gear switches into neutral, and turbine goes from maximum production to zero production almost instantly. Then as wind speed goes down, the opposite occurs.

    45. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Euler · · Score: 1

      How did that work out when California decided to allow "the free market"?
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...
       

    46. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      I didn't claim solar was steady state, just that it is a more gentle rise and fall. I made no comment on wind.

      There are plenty of power sinks that are more sudden than solar and the magnitude of the change is largely a matter of chance.

      I have no doubt that upgrades will be needed and agree that even people whose net use is zero should pay something for the grid services acting as storage for them, but it's hardly as serious as you make it out.

    47. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      The problem is that vast majority of those "sinks" are predictable (i.e. people coming home from work at certain time) and can be planned in advance. Proper grid management is hugely about this particular kind of prediction. Solar individually rarely has much impact, the problem is that it's usually people on the same residential circuit (the wealthy) install solar, and being in close proximity they start to randomly go up and down in unpredictable fashion. That is a huge problem for keeping the grid stable, unlike what you list.

    48. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      It's cheaper for everyone. For 8 hours work at minimum wage, you can buy hundreds of pounds of corn (or other grain). That may not be free but in the old days that would probably cost a whole season's work.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    49. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's total bullshit.

      Listing 0% profit on that bill is a marketing move pure and simple.

      Energy costs here in the UK are an absolute mess of finger pointing and FUD. This whole "yearly price lock-in bullshit" completely blows my mind. And the energy companies are trying to market themselves as "poor innocent us, we can't make any money in this market" ...boo...hoo...

    50. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      Why is a 2 KW swing from a solar panel more disruptive than a 2 KW swing from an A/C system coming on?

    51. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Yes, because A/C system is a drain on the total resources, which can be easily compensated by draining more from the transmission line which has reliable power sources with reliable automation to compensate for the drain.

      2KW from solar is much harder to compensate for because it does the exact opposite, dump extra power to the grid in an unpredictable fashion. And 2KW is not a problem - your particular residential circuit of the grid will readily eat that up in most cases. The problem begins when a lot of households in the same area put up panels. As they are in the same area, they will all be in near perfect sync for production/cessation of production cycles, and will all flare up and cut off at the same time. This will create huge (for a residential circuit) nearly perfectly timed spikes in the residential grid which in some cases may case the power flow to even reverse. This requires extremely complex additional automation systems and in some cases even bigger transmission lines to handle.

    52. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      Very few homes actually net 0 for the month. Practically none will go into the negative numbers since in most places the power company is never obligated to send you a check or maintain a 'power balance' from billing to billing, so after 0 you're just giving power away.

      So, that suggests that until 20% or so of homes adopt big enough PV arrays to net zero, the power generated will be absorbed by other homes in the area. (in other words, not a problem today or tomorrow). Until that day comes, PV is indistinguishable from the swings in load they must already be prepared to handle.

      The real trouble starts when there are enough solar installations to maintain voltage in the whole area even when a region is isolated from the grid. The local inverters will have found their own natural phase and frequency which won't be a close enough match to the grid to just close the switch again.

    53. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      And as the sun comes from behind the clouds and generation increases, the sun heats up houses and businesses, causing usage to spike. Aside from the people telling us the grid is so fragile it's a miracle it's working right now, nobody is calling that a problem.

    54. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand the issue judging from your last post. You seem assume that as long as "monthly average" isn't spikey, all is fine.

      Grids need to adjust to momentary spikes. Early grid management involved lot of analysts predicting things like consumption spikes after football games.

      This is essentially bigger spikes than that occurring several times a day in each segment of the grid where there's a significant portion of solar installation, in an unpredictable fashion. Even modern automation has severe problems keeping up with this, which brings cost of grid maintenance up significantly.

    55. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Who is telling you that's it's miracle it's working? Whoever he is, he's lying.

      It has nothing to do with miracles. It has everything to do with skilled engineers managing the grid to the best of their ability. And they are the ones telling you that we have a problem, it's just not big enough yet to completely exhaust their means of managing it.

      But day by day, the margin is getting smaller, and you really don't want small margins on something that needs near-100% uptime like electric grid.

    56. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      No, I am making a series of guesstimates about peak output of a system that would roughly average to zero after considering dark hours and cloudy days. Similar to but less rigorous than capacity planning that would go into an installation given that there's no financial benefit to a negative net use.

      As for the spikes, have you seen an air conditioner turn off? One instant it's on, the next it's off. Now, have you ever seen the sun blink off like that? How quickly do you suppose load drops when a tree or a car strikes a power pole? Would you characterize that as faster or slower than clouds drifting over a neighborhood? You seem to have an unfounded belief that sudden increase or decrease in load is somehow different from gaining/losing PV generation.

    57. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      You once again completely fail to account for a fact that conditioner on-off cycle is temperature based. People running the grids have their own thermostats in the area and supply more power to the grid which is determined to be in the area automatically when most people have theirs turn on.

      You also completely fail to account for the fact that it's much easier to compensate for one way flow than two way flow.

    58. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      You're saying they have no way at all to look at clouds?

      Meanwhile, you spoke of immediate surges. No thermometer that isn't in my house can predict exactly when my A/C will come on. While not common, it is nearly inevitable that every A/C in the neighborhood will just happen to power on or off at the same time.

      You also ignored the many other things I pointed out that are far more sudden and happen all too frequently.

      Until residential areas get a lot more solar installations, power won't be flowing backwards out of residential circuits, it will be flowing within the neighborhood (and so from the perspective of the managed grid, it will look like a lesser and varying load, not power flowing backwards).

    59. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      1. As in relation to solar power, as of writing this, none that I know of that would provide the necessary cushioning.

      2. You still ignore the fact that grid is essentially a single circuit, which means that AC that isn't perfectly in sync with on/off cycle across the neighbourhood (random switching you talk about) isn't going to stress it much. It's the "all at once" that does, like solar power. Similar switching on of the AC across working spaces for example, is typically preplanned by grid maintenance people based on historic references. Yes, you actually need to plan ahead on those things, and not planning ahead causes brown and even blackouts.

      3. As pointed, the problem comes from the fact that solar in concentrated in certain wealthy neighbourhoods, which are experiencing massively increased stress due to net metering. At the same time, those who don't use solar are effectively paying for extra hardware and manpower needed to keep that particular circuit and its connection to transit network stable it in most cases.

    60. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm sure they plan very carefully for cars hitting trees, branches shorting the lines, etc, etc. You really do like cherry-picking my statements and stuffing them with straw.

    61. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Really? I don't know about that, they've been like this around here since the 60's at least. The 50's and earlier were before my time.

    62. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Why can we remove network costs and VAT from calculations? Removing them only supports my argument - they both become representative of costs which were hidden from the end price charged to the consumer.

      And other costs subsidised includes the UK coal and natural gas industry, which was costing the Treasury billions in subsidisation as coal and natural gas purchased from abroad was cheaper and easier - but then we get into the thorny topic of Thatcher...

    63. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and when it gets dark, your country goes dark...

      Hope you like to go to bed at 6pm or burn candles/fires with all the problems that causes (more house fires, health problems etc)

    64. Re: Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have shifted to building wind farms to profit from the subsidy, that we now have to pay by the rules created , that now means we pay for them NOT to produce electricity, fucking insanity caused by asshole green fuck wits!!!

    65. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the UK we pay fucking wind mill farmers for electricity not produced, and for equipment not connected to the grid.

      even the fucking prime ministers father in-law is raking in cash for doing fuck all due to this!!!.

    66. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      They do actually. For all those things. That's why there are so few shorts that take out more than a single circuit in first world countries, and why in many cases, if car hits a major transmission line and severs it, they can usually reroute power through another route very quickly.

      I'm addressing your points. There's no "strawman" here. You are making l those points, and I'm pointing out flaws in YOUR points. Not in some random invented ones.

    67. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      So do they use a crystal snowball or does the Doctor work for them? I can just see it now. "Johnson! It's about time for that truck on I-15 to jacknife into power pylon 127, we're expecting to lose phase A. B and C will short together for 5 seconds, then go to ground. 30 seconds on my mark!.......

      If, on the other hand, you just mean they are prepared to deal with it, then there's your answer! Just be prepared to deal with it when the clouds drift lazily by and cause an actually predictable change in PV output across the area.

    68. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      No. They use extremely complex algorithms developed specifically for the task of predicting spikes based on detailed historic usage.

      Back in the day before this, they used to do this by hand. Back then, it was indeed something of a cross of engineering skill, technology and black magic with tarot cards.

      That's one of the main reasons why blackouts were far more common back in the day.

      In the end, you seem to assume that "well, it seems they're doing okay so far, so everything is fine". That is exactly what a person driving on worn out tyres says. Until the next time it rains and he hydroplanes into the nearest tree.

    69. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1
      No, I'm resuming that if they can deal with things that can only be predicted on a rough statistical basis like power poles being knocked down, they can deal with things that can be predicted reasonably well in the short term like the shadow path of a cloud going overhead.

      It is clear that you have made your mind up that solar is evil and no force on heaven or earth can ever change your mind, including the distinct lack of burning transformers in rich neighborhoods. I might as well go to the nearest serpent handling poison drinking church and share the evidence for evolution with them.

    70. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I'm now convinced that you're "electricity comes from the socket" kind of a person, that genuinely neither appreciates, nor is willing to listen to people that ensure that electricity does in fact come from the socket when needed.

      After all, if it works now, why wouldn't it work in the future? Who cares if this new technology is utterly incompatible with what we have? They managed to make it work so far, so surely, they'll keep making it work, no matter how much the strain increases.

      And of course, my payment for their services should not increase. They are making due with the current one, surely they'll do with it in the future.

    71. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by sjames · · Score: 1

      I see no evidence that you are one of the people who assures that electricity comes out of the socket. After all, when I make any vaguely technical statement to support my point you ignore it as if I offered you the plague.

      The people griping to legislators aren't either. They're more the making sure that bonuses and dividends come out of the customers type.

      And of course, my payment for their services should not increase. They are making due with the current one, surely they'll do with it in the future.

      You're not even listening. I was quite clear that there is justification to split the billing for grid services from billing for power. The former can probably be similar to the 95th percentile billing for network traffic. The average non-solar customer should see no difference.

    72. Re:Oh dear - money grows on trees... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      How nice.

      Except that right now, this very second, net metering policies mean that average non-solar customers are seeing their bills increase.

  7. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why? Seriously. If it's profit still, it's all good. As long as they break even.

    But I do understand they take the risks with all the infrastructure and whatnot, especially getting live human beings out there to fix downed cables during storms and whatnot.

    But still, as long as they break even, no problem exists.

  8. Upfront costs will slow adoption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see some people doing this but it will be mostly affluent people who find being "green" another advantage to keeping more money. Its just like electric cars, personal wind generators and such. Its not going to trickle down and help those who really struggle with electric bills or gas bills. Those people drive old cars, live in run down apartments and don't worry about saving the planet. I know my middle class income family could care less about Wind, solar or other green initiatives. Most likely what you will see first is new housing adopting a "green" design with many of these technologies. But it will likely again be targeted at more expensive housing.
    In my neighborhood of say 20 houses I have 2 home owners who have invested in corn heaters for the Winter. That was a limited investment because the corn burner was installed in place of the gas fireplace. Personally, I don't see any green energy initiative succeeding without many of the solutions becoming cheaper. That seems to be coming from China which is a laugh given their situation in pollution.

    1. Re:Upfront costs will slow adoption by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Makes hippy girls puddle. And who can put a price on that!

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    2. Re:Upfront costs will slow adoption by lenski · · Score: 1

      Bull shit. ...Hippy girls....

      I am damn tired of the unreliability of our current grid. I am in central Ohio: our power blinks at least once/month, and every few months it's out for hours. After any real storm, it's a week or more.

      If my house weren't surrounded by trees, I would have solar to offset/augment in normal times, and to work when the local power providers fail to deliver service.

    3. Re:Upfront costs will slow adoption by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Sounds like your local utility is skimping on tree trimming. Seriously, that's a local distribution issue, not a grid issue. The midwest's grid does not blink once a month.

      Every blink is a piece of local infrastructure failing and the backup kicking in. The real cute ones are fail, power for about half a second, second fail. It's simple probability, your primaries should not be failing once a month. The local utility is likely just running in 'never replace anything not on fire' mode.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  9. Re:cut utility profits from 8% to 41% by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

    Subsidy of solar tends to pay for itself. In the end we all have to pay for new capacity, be out through energy bills or taxes. Solar more than pays for itself, reduces pollution and tends to encourage the owner to be more efficient.

    Also, often the subsidy is actually a loan.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  10. solar plan for canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    cost to install 600,000 homes - about 3.4 billion per year
    emplyment to install 74,000 workers at 20 dollars a hour - tax about 45%+hst ( 13 more percent )
    3 billion of the 3.4 billion of course ( of which the above taxes are extracted ) 1.4billion +hst (200 mill more)=1.6 billion

    so above 3.4 billion -1.6 billion cost = 1.8 billion 1st year

    600,000 homes not paying electricity save 10000 dollars and that equates to 1300 ( HST ) x 600,000
    780 million per year

    cost first year about 1.1 billion

    NEXT year think 1.2 million homes and that 780 million X2

    so inside 2 years the govt is gaining in taxes and the people have begun gaining but at a sustained rate new wealth....

    this goes on 20 years and cause they last 20 years you have a perpetuating industry

    YET NOT ONE OF THE TOP 3 PARTIES WANTS THIS FOR ITS PEOPLE.

    AND yes the math is not exact here this is a quick example, now imagine the usa and germany doing this

    imagine china and india

    1. Re:solar plan for canada by HornWumpus · · Score: 0

      True for definitions of 'not exact' that equal 'fantasy pulled from a dark stinky place'.

      A $6000 solar system produces $10000 per year? In Canada? Fucking idiot AC! Don't post again.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  11. Re:cut utility profits from 8% to 41% by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2

    I have read TFA.

    The assumption for reduced profit due to increased PV usage was 8% for a specific northeastern utility company, 15% for a specific southwestern one.

    That "up to 41%" number came from "using certain other assumptions" for the southwestern utility.

    In other words, TFS is, at best, misleading as hell.

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  12. Predictions for 2030 by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 1

    A whopping 10% of new buildings will have had their shingles replaced by 'smart' shingles which incorporate solar cells. Freakin' solar roofs! Then in a devastating flurry of bank foreclosures, rent-to-own house flippees and general financial ruin, leaks, hazardous conditions and owner angst, replaced again with... shingles. There will be at least one (1) closet full of corroded electronics, taped off wires in the main panel that used to go to "that thing". And in the kids' bedroom a silent panel on the wall that becomes the instrument panel of a spaceship.

    If the presence of that silent panel helps kids to dream of going into space again, it will all be worth it.

    So carry on. It's just that as a renter with no savings who would have been tapping at the middle class by now if it were not for the general economic outlook, who had to help the landlord dig up the sewer tap and re-plumb the bathroom to reduce the rent... all this hoo-hah to replace reliable wire-delivered base load energy with... toys that add complexity to a simple energy equation... seems outlandish.

    I'm a techie and love science but also a realist.

    --
    <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
    1. Re:Predictions for 2030 by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Don't ruin the beauty of the thing with reality.

  13. Utilities Fighting Back by maynard · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As the Economist notes, due to German and other European solar government incentives, European utilities face an existential threat to their investment future and business model. Utility giants the world over have seen this and decided to fight back against Net Metering and other means whereby homeowners can feed back into the electric grid excess energy production from rooftop solar. Barclays, the British multinational banking giant, agrees that rooftop solar and net metering represent a threat to centralized electric production utilities.

    The problem utilities face is that solar tends to maximize output at mid-afternoon, exactly the same time spot prices have traditionally been at maximum. So their solution is to lobby government the world over to reverse net metering laws and end solar subsidies.

    OK, time for me to get on a soapbox. I think this is shortsighted. The real problem here is that government and electric utilities have agreed on a price structure and investment plan to build out gas powered and coal powered plants that now appear to be unsustainable due to disruptive shifts in the market from technical innovation in the renewable field. As is noted in TFA, solar is - or will soon be - already cost competitive even without government subsidy.

    Market fundamentalists would argue, 'let the utilities die. Their investors bought into a dying technology, the market will decide their fate.' Except that they have an endless stream of money to buy lobbyists and legislators to warp law in their favor. Further, they have a good argument that intermittent renewables will only meet partial demand. You still need baseline generation capacity from central utilities. So the problem - from their perspective - is excess production by renewables.

    Except: when has excess energy production ever been a problem?

    The real problem is twofold: We want to move off of fossil fuels due to global climate change and they want to maximize their vast infrastructure investments. A real policy solution would meet both needs.

    Rooftop solar should be maximized. During periods of excess, gas powered plants should funnel their energy to local raw materials ore processing facilities and manufacturing. This has the benefit of distributing labor where it's needed near mining sites, rather than shipping raw materials where labor is cheapest for exploitation as well. And it keeps utilities running for the next thirty years to generate a viable expected ROI. And government policymakers could then plan a rational transition period away from fossil fuels without the economic dislocation of utility giants imploding worldwide.

    Thoughts?

    1. Re:Utilities Fighting Back by fche · · Score: 2

      "Market fundamentalists would argue, 'let the utilities die. "

      No, market fundamentalists would argue, let the mandated subsidies to solar etc. die first.

    2. Re:Utilities Fighting Back by maynard · · Score: 5, Informative

      For the most part, they already have.

      US Solar subsidies in decline:
      http://www.pv-magazine.com/new...

      Australian subsidies in decline:
      http://www.theaustralian.com.a...

      China cuts solar subsidies:
      http://www.bloomberg.com/news/...

      And yet it hasn't stopped solar deployments. Because even without subsidies, they're now cost competitive. Utility companies can't use the canard of government subsidized energy any longer. Yet they've invested - as the Economist notes - half a trillion in fossil fuel plants worldwide. I'm proposing a solution that at least prevents a utility meltdown during the transition period.

    3. Re:Utilities Fighting Back by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      And this just demonstrates why market fundamentalism, just like about any other fundamentalism I could name, is foolish.

      People do not exist to serve markets. Markets exist to serve people.

      If all that mattered was that cash continued to flow back and forth in an orderly manner, maybe market fundamentalism would be worth all the worship it's given. But there's an extraneous concept known as progress. Progress requires R&D, which isn't a profit center. R&D used to be very important, up until about the 1980s when the name of the game changed from Industry to Money Manipulation.

      R&D has another name. Investment. In theory, market fundamentalists should laud this, then, since investment is how you leverage the system. But since only sure-bet/quick-pay investments are in vogue these days and physical R&D can have wildly varying results and years of effort, pure R&D isn't valued any more.

      Solar Subsidies are - or at least are supposed to be - investment in practical R&D. An attempt to build up a critical mass that will allow getting off century-old energy production and on to presumably better options. The fact that government subsidies are using pretty much the entire population as investors may get some people irate, but in any reasonably democratic society, the majority is - if not in favor - at least not actively opposed. And governments are not - contrary to popular belief - the only agencies who attempt coercive means of gaining additional investment in any event. I've had the screws put to me personally once or twice, and can name a few other people as well. The main difference is that private concerns can't usually add jail time to their threats.

      Actually, subsidies are nothing more than an attempt to make trickle-down economics work practically. And, unlike the other kind, sometimes subsidized technology actually works.

    4. Re:Utilities Fighting Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When we talk about markets in this context, we are talking about businessmen taking a business risk to serve a market!

    5. Re: Utilities Fighting Back by kenh · · Score: 1

      "Decline" is not "dead", decline means a little less.

      The federal subsidies that distort the market for home solar panels should end. Insulating buyers from the actual cost of solar panels removes incentives for industries to find more cost efficient technologies.

      The requirements that utilities buy whatever random excess electricity you roof top solar cells happen to generate at a price far in excess of the cost the utility could generate it for needs to stop.

      The power buyback program is insanity, nothing less. Consider this - imagine we were back at the turn of the last century, and buggy whips were a big industry. Then someone invents a home buggy whip machine which turns out buggy whips at a random rate. Now the government, bowing to the idea that poor people can't afford buggy whips decides to cover half the cost of every buggy whip machine purchased. Furthermore, the government decides that in order to help make buggy whips more affordable, buggy whip manufacturers are forced to pay above retail price for every excess buggy whip every home buggy whip machine produced.

      When the buggy whip industry collapses, it wouldn't be because of the invention of the home buggy whip machine, it would be as a result of the federal and state regulations.

      --
      Ken
    6. Re:Utilities Fighting Back by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      So their solution is to lobby government the world over to reverse net metering laws and end solar subsidies.

      They were fine with allowing those subsidies to be passed when they knew no one would be using them. Now that solar cell production has radically ramped up and is finally enjoying actual economies of scale and people are actually using the subsidy, they're howling and crying to have it removed.

      Because in the face of profit, policy dies.

    7. Re:Utilities Fighting Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Market fundamentalists don't understand real investment. Their idea of investment wholly centers around asset appreciation.

      The idea that you might have to invest at a loss for years in order to get real returns (not just returns from phoney Federal Reserve and Wall Street asset appreciation policies) makes them very uncomfortable. Because if the only hard returns from investment are from the guys making long term investments and taking losses for years then what are the guys that invest in short term asset application?

      Parasites.

    8. Re:Utilities Fighting Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like most people, I think that the future grid is based on renewables (plus nuclear). And yes, solar will play a big part, because it will eventually get cheap enough. I do have to wonder, though, about how the billions that taxpayers have paid in subsidies has really accelerated the price decline of solar. Only a tiny sliver of those subsidies were reinvested into research. Most of it went into making inefficient and overpriced panels that teach us nothing about how the solar boom is going to look once the price is right. Instead of insisting that we have subsidized solar on rooftops now, I'd much rather have unsubsidized but cheaper solar on rooftops everywhere, and sooner. That's where money should have been going all along.

    9. Re: Utilities Fighting Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My thought has always been they should overbuild capacity for renewables to 3-4x demand, and use excess electricity during off peak times to electrolyze the shit out of water and use the h2 to run fuel cells when the wind/solar/whatever needs backup

    10. Re: Utilities Fighting Back by maynard · · Score: 1

      Hi Ken,

      If I understand your comment correctly, you argue that all renewable subsidies ought to end. And in particular, argue that Net Metering laws are an especially pernicious subsidy that forces utility companies to buy energy from homeowners at inflated rates. You use the common 'buggy whip' metaphor for disruptive economic shifts due to technological advancement to explain this rationale, presenting the hypothetical: what would happen if government had subsidized buggy whips?

      So I'll counter, there are two kinds of renewable subsidies at play here.

      The first are manufacturing subsidies. China subsidized manufacturing buildout of solar assembly lines with the hope they would take a dominant position in the world market. They're betting solar will be a high growth high-tech market and these subsidies will have long term benefit to the Chinese economy. This is no different from the US betting big by subsidizing pharmaceuticals through medical research grants. Or the initial funding of computer science and packet switched networking (ARPANET), what we now enjoy as the Internet. Those subsidies funneled wealth toward industries each nation expected would show long term economic benefit.

      From that perspective, fossil fuels receive significant subsidies today, even as solar manufacturing subsidies decline. See this BBC article:

      http://www.bbc.com/news/busine...

      But there's a second kind of solar subsidy. The one you argue is especially pernicious. That of Net Metering, whereby utilities buy back electric generation by rooftop solar. This subsidizes not the manufacture of panels but their purchase, deployment, and use. As utility companies complain, Net Metering essentially is forcing those companies to diminish the value of their investments in gas and coal fired power plants. Since they've put billions - half a trillion wordlwide - into these investments, a general popular shift to rooftop solar means that as local solar ownership increases so too does the value of central production decrease.

      Why should laws force them to buy the knife that's slitting their own throats?

      I argue because increased energy production - in aggregate - is a net good across the board. The solution is not to limit deployment of renewables, particularly since they're already cost effective, but to find alternative use for those gas and coal burning plants during this transition period. You won't get buy-in from utility investors unless they see some kind of ROI on prior investment. Otherwise, they'll fight this to the bitter end, which would delay renewable deployment longer than planning to maximizing use of current fossil fuel infrastructure anyway.

      But let's get to your buggy whip argument. Because I think this is particularly flawed. Here, you conflate a manufactured good - the buggy whip - with an energy resource. It takes net energy to make buggy whips. If they're useless, regardless of subsidy, that's a net loss to the economy and society in general. The whip will sit unused until it decays and is thrown away. Energy production is different. This can be stored for use another day. Whether that's direct use in smelting and manufacturing, as I proposed, or in storage - say mass hydro by pumping water uphill, hydrogen gas production and storage, whatever - energy production can be converted and saved in ways that a useless manufactured object cannot.

      The analogy fails because the two (subsidized energy production vs subsidized manufacturing) are not comparable at fundamental levels.

      At least, that's the perspective I take. I look forward to your counter-argument. Best. -M

  14. The power companies will make up for it by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    The power companies always win this game. They'll find reasons to increase rates even with demand down. Even more so, as the global population increases, fewer people will be living in their own houses - and fewer will have roofs to install rooftop solar on to.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:The power companies will make up for it by hodet · · Score: 1

      Which would drive more people to alternative energy. Vicious cycle. Energy companies can also cut costs by closing power plants and tightening supply. They can also diversify into manufacturing and supporting alternative energy installations. Ok well that last point will need less dinosaurs in the corner offices.

    2. Re:The power companies will make up for it by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      Which would drive more people to alternative energy.

      I think the big question here is how many people will have the ability to make that choice. People in high density housing (apartments, condos, townhomes, duplexes, etc) generally only get a choice of one supplier for electricity and they don't have the right to get new lines installed. As more of the world's population ends up living in dense cities, the percentage of people with the ability to select alternative energy sources declines.

      Energy companies can also cut costs by closing power plants and tightening supply.

      From my recollection of Economics 1001 a reduction in supply with static or increasing demand leads to an increase in price.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  15. Not in Spain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. Re:Not in Spain... by MPAB · · Score: 1

      I don't know why you've been downmodded. This is for real.

  16. They think Solar is bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should wait until Infra-red panels hit the market.

    They absorb energy during the night too!

    1. Re:They think Solar is bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. The IR panels will produce enough electricity at night to power a wristwatch or a small calculator!

  17. Or utilities could take solar more seriously by Required+Snark · · Score: 1
    Just a thought. If distributed individual and business installations are able to cut into electric utilities profit, maybe that same technology could benefit the utilities bottom line. Maybe instead of being an all or nothing winner take all big vs small capitalistic scrum, there could be a viable middle ground. Utilities could sponsor business/household solar and share in the rewards. Not everyone can or wants to install solar, so the utilities could be part of the solution.

    I know that the idea of cooperation makes the Slashdot libertards brains hurt, but society rarely prospers when entrenched special interests dictate the rules so they gain more power and money. This can happen on the left (see the current mess in Argentina), but in the US the problem is on the right. All the major players (banks, big pharma, aerospace, telecom, entertainment/media) use regulation to create captive markets and guaranteed profit. No capitalism in sight.

    So the challenge is to take a highly regulated critical infrastructure sector and make it transition to a different energy generation model that includes renewables like wind and solar, as well as local generation. Unfortunately, the current campaign contribution driven hyper partisan political landscape makes this highly unlikely. When you see an energy sector dancing to the tune of the Koch brothers, it's hard to be positive about the future.

    --
    Why is Snark Required?
    1. Re:Or utilities could take solar more seriously by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The utilities companies could indeed find a new source of revenue from "power services" or "power consulting", that is designing, financing (selling, renting, loaning, funding, leasing) and installing integrated systems consisting of variable power sources, including the wall socket or higher voltage line as needed.

    2. Re:Or utilities could take solar more seriously by dbIII · · Score: 1

      use regulation to create captive markets and guaranteed profit. No capitalism in sight.

      That's a good point - governments typically make a lot of money from special taxes on coal and oil which creates a major conflict of interest with electricity regulation. IMHO that's why we are seeing little photovoltaic panels in private hands on rooftops instead of big industrial scale solar thermal that could be vastly cheaper per MW. It could make economic sense for such a thing but it doesn't get a chance.

    3. Re:Or utilities could take solar more seriously by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 1

      If you make electricity with renewables, you need a lot of surface area. That's a big burden. But if you can overcome that, you have new transmission lines to build, and new maintenance to buy equipment and train people. If you luck out completely, you may not have new lines.

      Then, you have to balance renewables against keeping reserve capacity ready to go. And no cheating here, because all renewables have dips in output. So you buy coal or gas slightly cheaper, but it is more expensive per kWh for traditional fuel.

      Still competing with individuals generating their own solar on site, your surcharged solar is not attractive. Sure, people like renters will still pay. Owners will switch if they can. And it keeps getting cheaper to switch.

      Now your infrastructure and investment is larger. And more threatened, but necessary for reserve supply.

      We can jump straight to magical New revenue stream, but papers like this barely cover the question of how much new revenue might be needed. You can't believe that the industry has no one working on that answer, but after zero consideration a dotslash poster has the answer.

      As always, a good idea has details which may render the obvious nearly impossible. Just like the replies about Germany doing solar, these details make a huge difference, but many just parrot the parts that sound good.

    4. Re:Or utilities could take solar more seriously by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think the suggestion was basically to pay people to install solar - basically, rent it out. Even with all the subsidies, the initial cost is still hefty, and it takes long enough to recoup that not that many homeowners can afford it. But I think that quite a few would agree to have the company install its panels on their roofs, if that meant that they'd get power at a significantly lower price. The lines for this are all already in place, too.

  18. Headline and summary completely wrong by tomhath · · Score: 5, Informative

    A study by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory predicts that distributed rooftop solar panel installations will grow from 0.2% market penetration today to 10% by 2022

    That is not what the study shows at all. They did an analysis of what the revenue impact on utility companies would be at various hypothetical levels of PV installation between 0.2% and 10%. It ignored total costs of PV (including installation and maintenance).

    Most importantly, the study does not predict that PV installations will grow to 10% or any other level. It is just a "what if" analysis.

    1. Re:Headline and summary completely wrong by BlackPignouf · · Score: 4, Funny

      Guys, bring the pitchforks : someone RTFA!

    2. Re:Headline and summary completely wrong by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Ban him.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  19. Re:cut utility profits from 8% to 41% by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 2

    No, solar does not pay for itself. People who install solar, get huge tax gifts, and get to force their sales at retail rates in competition with others plants that sell at wholesale rates, do make THEIR money back, but the taxpayers never will. Prices don't matter in this context, its cost, and cost of solar remains very high. And of course, what every solar fan like to ignore, is the cost of backup up all that solar. Very conveniently ignored.

  20. Try Australia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    some say we broke our market offering 40-58c / kwh for solar as a rebate... either way were up 14% in the 2013-2014 and were expecting 3% a year for another 2 to come

    http://www.aemc.gov.au/media/docs/Fact-Pack---AEMC-Price-Trends-Report-53b9d522-662f-467e-bf8a-b74d69d696d7-0.PDF

  21. Generation and distribution by jbeaupre · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Utilities actually have two businesses: Generation and distribution. We pay one bill and conflate the two. Solar just makes it clear they are different.

    With home solar increasing, utilities will just invest less and less in generation. The transition is pretty gradual, so they can adapt just fine. Profits from generation will decline ... life will go on. But only if we accept that distribution also needs to be paid for.

    If and until home power storage also becomes economical, homes are still going to need to connect to the grid. That infrastructure will need to be paid for. It's going to be tacked onto the utility bill. In the past, we subsidized small users by paying by the kwh. Now we have to decide if connection fees are more appropriate. That's what the debate is going to turn into.

    --
    The world is made by those who show up for the job.
    1. Re: Generation and distribution by GWBasic · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, when home solar really works, I'm ditching my gas furnace, and getting a 2nd electric car. I'll still be on the grid long after I stop buying petroleum and natural gas.

    2. Re:Generation and distribution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Here in Houston, our generation and distribution are separate. We have over 30 different electricity retailers (and 2 generators), each of whom has a zillion different plans. You should see it. And they all have these fancy names like RateLocker, RateProtector, NightHawk, etc that give you all sorts of different rates depending on what you want. There's one that gives you free power on Sunday. There's one that charges less at night than during the day.

      I really hope the rest of the country doesn't end up this way. It's a pain in the ass. You thought cell phone contracts were bad? Try an electricity contract. Yes, it's a contract of fixed length (12 months, 24 months, etc.) and if you cancel, you pay a fee. One I looked at was a 5 year contract that cost $150/year remaining if you wanted out! (If you move out of their service area and can prove that, they do let you out free, fortunately.)

    3. Re:Generation and distribution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't have to be like that unless you (as in the population at large over there) want it to be. Here in Sweden we also get two different bills. One for distribution, from a company determined by where we live. Another for production, from a company chosen by ourselves. I have many more than 30 choices, but that's no problem since the alternatives are all understandable and comparable. There are options for a fixed price for e.g. 12 months, or spot price + x%. There are also absurd c ontract lengths, the worst I have seen was 8 years. But that's easily fixed by not choosing absurd contract lengths. I'm not completely sure why the prices are understandable and comparable. It could be due to regulation (gasp!) or possibly due to consumers preferring those kinds of options, marginalizing the others.

      However, it has been a long time since I was actively shopping for a retailer. I'm a member of a wind-power co-op, and just choose the retailer that the co-op has partnered with. And then I pay the rate decided on our annual meeting, to cover the operation, maintenance and depreciation of our nine power plants. The retailer gets paid by the co-op for administration, and they also get to outright sell electricity to me if I consume more than covered by my shares in the co-op. Right now my consumption is within what my shares allow, so my bills are determined pretty much by what the production cost is, and not by supply and demand on the market.

      Ofcourse none of that affects what I pay for distribution, those bills are the same for me as for my neighbors who have chosen other generation. And those local monopolies are regulated more tightly than the generation.

    4. Re: Generation and distribution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Solar works now! Especially if you have an electric vehicle or two to dump any excess into. Just dumped my furnace in favor of a heatpump.

  22. US energy trolls go on the rampage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    US energy trolls go on the rampage. News at 10!
    Its not a question of when or how, but what else did you expect?
    A re-run of the Boston Tea Party?

    Energy trolls starting with Enron learned early how to bankrupt states
    through energy trolling business practices and pass on their skills to global energy
    trolling crocporations.

    Following fast in their foot steps now we have glow ball wamming
    tax to fund alternative energy. And at least in one state in USA, the
    energy trolls now get to collect money from you if you fit solar panels
    because you owe them a living.

  23. Electric rates going up 37% in Massachusetts now by bigpat · · Score: 1

    They just approved a 37% electricity rate increase here in Massachusetts... The utility companies will get their money until people can go off the grid completely: http://www.masslive.com/busine...

  24. mostly the grid by fermion · · Score: 1
    To be sure, like most legacy industry, there is likely no ability to innovate. Think of american cars in the 70's. Energy generation is still powered by coal, coal plants are still being built, and we are still fighting over emissions. I don't know if a report saying that the industry needs to innovate will do any good. Making coal fired plants too expensive to build by requiring them to be clean might have an effect, and force the industry to innovate.

    In any case, the incumbents are clearly show massive inefficiencies. In locations where electricity is sold competitively, prices can vary by 25% or more. This indicates that there is quite a bit of wiggle room in pricing. However, what we are really talking about here is volume. Without volume the incumbents firms that sell power, not produce it, are going to get squeezed out. Producers will shut down plants, and that may have long term effects in energy security.

    What is really an issue is the grid. There is at some point going to have to be a charge for hooking up to the grid. Already people on low cost plans that do not use enough electricity pay an extra fee for administrative and grid costs. This is where legislation will come in. Are we going to require a house that is self sufficient to be connected to the grid? Are we going to allow houses in more expensive locations, be it rural or more prone to damage, to be charged more to be connected to the grid?

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  25. 37% increase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    37% rate increase allowed by regulators in mass for electric bills...more for businesses.

    If it gets too bad, I imagine a connection fee being created to make up for solar losses. Hey its not cheap keeping the system working.

    cars breaking utility poles, poles rotting, underground cable faults...

  26. The industry will NEVER allow you free energy... by MindPrison · · Score: 2

    ...even if you produce it yourself.

    I too have off-the-grid dreams as a house-owner, but the power companies always find a way, same thing with the electrical car that could run on water. Lobbyist will manipulate (read: FORCE) politicians into their direction, so you'll be depending on them one way or the other. The Politicians won't have a hard time accepting this as they need their energy tax income.

    Taxes are like drugs, once you're hooked - it's very hard to get off, like addicts...politicians will find a way to make you pay either way. It's now getting to be environmentally sound? Fine...that's part of what I wish for too, but even though - we won't be off the hook that easily, government and companies that had enjoyed family power for centuries won't give up without a bloody fight, that I can pretty much guarantee you.

    The general customer isn't that wise, they have no clue how anything affect our environment and politicians can pretty much tell them any half-truth to make them believe the complete lie. Half-truth is a classic, and widely used within leadership: Say...you purchase a new and better battery, but the management is taking losses on that purchase, it's environmentally sound - but they want the less eco-friendly solution because it earns them MONEY (and government profits on higher taxes as well), so they will tell you that YOUR SOLUTION isn't any good because of "insert-some-dubious-chemical-and-its-production-environment-here" and use that as a legitimate excuse. Nevermind the fact that it's actually a LOT more eco-friendly than the previous product, half-truth folks, it's a winner every time.

    You as the consumer just need to educate yourselves a little bit more, stop accepting every thing imposed onto your lives by your elected politicians, demand scrutiny and don't just trust everything you hear. Be skeptical.

    --
    What this world is coming to - is for you and me to decide.
  27. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A post that has random CAPITALIZED words screams NUTCASE.

  28. Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by jonwil · · Score: 3, Informative

    In some areas of the US (especially the south eastern states where cheap dirty coal rains supreme) state governments have banned the kind of solar fiance schemes and loans that have allowed people in the west or in the north east to get solar panels on their home without the huge up-front cost. Yes the solar company makes money from the deal but the home owner still comes out on top in that they aren't paying anywhere near as much in power bills.

    Also utilities have attempted to restrict (and in numerous cases succeeded in restricting) the amount of power allowed into the grid from small scale generation (including grid-tie solar) or have reduced or eliminated feed-in tariffs in way that make solar less viable.

    Plus there are cases of outright bans on some kinds of solar setups (I cant find a cite right now but there have been cases where people have wanted to install solar panels and a battery bank or whatever and completly disconnect from grid power but have been prohibited from doing so by state and local laws)

    1. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by CanEHdian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Plus there are cases of outright bans on some kinds of solar setups (I cant find a cite right now but there have been cases where people have wanted to install solar panels and a battery bank or whatever and completly disconnect from grid power but have been prohibited from doing so by state and local laws)

      What happens if you don't pay your power bill and they come and disconnect you themselves? If they come and see the solar and have been instructed by company brass to forgo the disconnection in those cases, let the poor (that DO get disconnected) and their advocates know... won't take long before that changes.

      --
      When the copyright term is "forever minus a day", live every day like it's the last.
    2. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I'd love to see the citation where people are forbidden from installing solar on their own property. I'm finding that hard to believe. Unless it's some of these rich bitch subdivisions that have draconian rules governing what you can do with your home. In that case though you agreed to be their bitch when you bought the place.

    3. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      True. I am preparing for a multi-year court battle myself over the right to put an antenna on my roof. I did it to myself, but fighting fascism from the inside is more effective when you're dealing with people who don't understand that in UDOTS, laws are for restricting governments, not freedom.
      Still, I fear the battle is lost once you realize that a strip search at an airport is deemed reasonable. Before you argue what "a well regulated militia" means, you need to define "infringed". Well, I mean to say, you need to stop running words through Google translate English--doublespeak.
      More to your point, I suggest you start reviewing the laws in your own town. Just because you haven't been prosecuted for violating a city ordinance or tax law, doesn't mean you're not guilty.

    4. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'd love to see the citation where people are forbidden from installing solar on their own property.

      It's not installing solar on their own property that's forbidden. It's installing sufficient solar and battery backup to power the house and then disconnecting from the grid that's forbidden.

      Many parts of the country have what's called an occupancy permit. You may not live in a building that hasn't been issued that permit. The conditions for getting that permit are pretty simple, but they were written a little too specifically. For most of them, the building is required to have running water plumbed indoors, corresponding sewage plumbed out (and that sewer line must terminate in a septic tank, anaerobic digester, or sewage system, not an open holding pond), and finally, the building must be connected to the electrical grid. That's the way many of them are worded. They do not say "must have electrical power available". They specify the grid. So you can install all the solar panels and batteries you want, but if you disconnect from the grid, your occupancy permit can be revoked.

      One hopes the various levels of government that have the excessively specific wording will fix it, but for the time being, it's a real thing, and a problem.

    5. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In some areas of the US (especially the south eastern states where cheap dirty coal rains supreme) state governments have banned the kind of solar fiance schemes and loans that have allowed people in the west or in the north east to get solar panels on their home without the huge up-front cost."

      This is a prime example of how the market does not care about people. If people suffer, the market doesn't care. But government is mandated to provide for the General Welfare. The citizens of the states should vote out their state governments, and vote in people that will make utilities truly public and non-profit, as they used to be while America was becoming a world superpower.

    6. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by MarkRose · · Score: 1

      In some areas of the US (especially the south eastern states where cheap dirty coal rains supreme)

      Did you mean acid rain's supreme? Or reigns supreme?

      --
      Be relentless!
    7. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by CyprusBlue113 · · Score: 1

      True. I am preparing for a multi-year court battle myself over the right to put an antenna on my roof. I did it to myself, but fighting fascism from the inside is more effective when you're dealing with people who don't understand that in UDOTS, laws are for restricting governments, not freedom.
      Still, I fear the battle is lost once you realize that a strip search at an airport is deemed reasonable. Before you argue what "a well regulated militia" means, you need to define "infringed". Well, I mean to say, you need to stop running words through Google translate English--doublespeak.
      More to your point, I suggest you start reviewing the laws in your own town. Just because you haven't been prosecuted for violating a city ordinance or tax law, doesn't mean you're not guilty.

      There shouldn't be any court battle over this if you did it correctly. FCC trumps.

      --
      a handful of selfish greedy people are no match for millions of selfish, greedy people -u4ya
    8. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      You mean "used to be cheap dirty coal." Ever since the EPA required the use of extensive exhaust emission controls to cut soot and sulfur emissions, you no longer get the infamous "acid rain" cause by sulfur dioxide gas blown downwind of the coal-fired power plant here in the USA and there are very little soot issues from burning coal. Of course, it does help that many utilities switched to vastly cleaner-burning coal from Wyoming's Powder River region in the last 40 years.

    9. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      The way these dickheads have written laws everybody is guilty of something. There are laws to conflict with laws about other laws. It's gone beyond ridiculous to the point even the judges can't figure it out.

    10. Re:Or they will simply get it banned or restricted by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Damn. What if you didn't want electricity? They do realize it is entirely possible to live without it? Not a lot of fun maybe but doable. Jeez.

  29. TFA False Premise by anorlunda · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The TFA uses a false model for computing profits. In the USA nearly all electric utilities are regulated monopolies. The government grants them a monopoply for a particular service area. The utility fronts the capital investment (historically up to 20% of all capital investment in the whole country!!! They must raise the capital in the private markets and convince investors to invest in utilites instead of Apple or Alibaba. High returns are needed to attract that money.). The pubic service commission is obligated to allow rates that guarantee the utility a defined return on investment profit. In real life, there is a lot of wiggle room and lots of politics in rate setting, but competitive pressure is not a factor. TFA ignores this.

    We could, as a matter of public policy, decide to revoke the monopoly. That would open the door to any competitor, but it would also allow the utility to charge any rate they like without asking permission, and would remove any obligations regarding reliability and quality of service. (Think daily brownouts for anyone who doesn't pay for "premium service" on the hottest day of the year.) It would also open the door for another set of poles and another set of wires running down every street; one set per competitor. NYC was like that in the 1890s, and some places in Asia are like that today with hundreds of wires on every pole and laying over every rooftop.

    But a death spiral in which rising rates paid by the remaining non-solar customers drive more and more customers to generate their own power could still be possible. But it would not directly affect utility profits as the TFA claims. The regulated utility business model would be challenged, not the profits of utilities that remain regulated. Those profits are guaranteed by law.

    We should also recognize that lots of the population lives in high rise apartments and do not own enough rooftop or yard square feet to use solar panels.

    1. Re:TFA False Premise by PPH · · Score: 2

      What will happen is that utilities will realize that they are not recovering their investments in electrical distribution networks from customers who just use them to trade power back and forth. nd they will change their tarifs to reflec the new useage pattern. Customers will be charged an energy charge for net power consumed pr paid for excess power fed back in. But the utility system investment will be recovered by a charge for power exchanged in either direction. In other words, you will pay a certain amount per peak killowatt drawn from the utility or fed back into it.

      Some people will go off grid. Most cannot affort the cost, space requirements and maintenance of a battery bank and will opt to purchase the equivalent of this function from the local utility. Once the utilities get over their old school thinking of selling power and rewrite their tariffs, they will be happy to provide this service.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    2. Re:TFA False Premise by anorlunda · · Score: 2

      One could carry it to the logical extreme. Expect everyone to supply their own power, but charge only a fixed fee to serve as a backup source.

      Even in thst extreme case, the public service commission is required to grant rates which proved the utilities a guaranteed return in investment. Investments in transmission and distribution are huge. Return on those investments does not depend on them actually delivering energy all the time.

      A death spiral would occur if too many people go completely off grid. But those people will have to learn to live with having power only part time. There are periods in winter where days are short and winds are calm for weeks at a time. In places where it gets to be 20 below, backup,power os dearly needed. (Things are a bit easier in warm, sunny, parts of the country.)

      You are also still neglecting the people in high density and high rise housing who can not easily generate their own power. As many as half the population is in that category.

  30. How silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cut profits? What a silly claim.

    What's about the only time solar generates much electricity? On bright, sunny summer days. And when do power companies have the most trouble keeping up with demands On those same bright, summer days.

    When consumers are foolish enough to buy a solar system and when we, as tax-payers, are foolish enough to subsidize them, then we're increasing those power company profits. They're spared the need to invest in new generating capacity at their own expense.

    I might add that those power companies aren't as stupid as their critics. Their executives are clever enough to cook the books and make it look like solar costs them. That'll justify tax benefits and rate increases they're always wanting.

    Oh, yes, if you want to get a herd of stupid people thundering in a particular direction, all you need do is talk about "corporate profits." Their minds short-circuit and what little thinking they can do at best ceases altogether.

    1. Re:How silly by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      What's about the only time solar generates much electricity? On bright, sunny summer days. And when do power companies have the most trouble keeping up with demands On those same bright, summer days.

      That depends on where you live. And what about those hot humid days with rain pouring down and the sun is nowhere to be seen? And hot nights when solar is generating zero?

      Wind at least has the advantage of working at night, and all four seasons (solar panels get covered with snow, frost and ice).

      For many areas, solar is better to use for things like direct hot-water heating, rather than converting it to electricity.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  31. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by MindPrison · · Score: 0

    A post that has random CAPITALIZED words screams NUTCASE.

    Well, at least this NuTcAsE puts a name to his words unlike you, AC. :)

    --
    What this world is coming to - is for you and me to decide.
  32. Obama's war on coal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yes the regulations you environmentalists have placed strangling the energy industry do increase costs. Obama promised that your electricity rates will necessarily skyrocket and they have. It's one of the few campaign promises he actually kept. But you continue to blame the evil capitalistic energy companies for a problem your own laws and policies have created!

  33. Not so.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, the cost of subsidizing solar and wind has doubled the cost of power in Germany. Not only is that inflicting pain on consumers, German manufacturing is finding it hard to compete with countries where energy is cheaper. Politicians are quickly backtracking.

    And Germany's power industry is increasing the amount of energy generated with coal. That's because coal power is the cheapest and they need some way to keep down those skyrocketing prices. Absent the need for that, many of those companies could afford more expensive but cleaner sources such as natural gas, using gas either from Russia or from fracking to create a domestic supply.

    Mandating expensive and unpredictable power sources such as solar and wind, is making German power generation more coal-based and thus dirtier. Closing nuclear plants is having a similar impact on the more stable sources of power.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-04-14/coal-rises-vampire-like-as-german-utilities-seek-survival.html

    Note this:

    "The result: RWE now generates 52 percent of its power in Germany from lignite, up from 45 percent in 2011. And RWE isnÃ(TM)t alone. Utilities all over Germany have ramped up coal use as the nation has watched the mix of coal-generated electricity rise to 45 percent last year, the highest level since 2007."

    1. Re:Not so.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Actually, the cost of subsidizing solar and wind has doubled the cost of power in Germany.

      It has done no such thing, neither wholesale nor retail.

      Germany's power industry is increasing the amount of energy generated with coal. That's because coal power is the cheapest and they need some way to keep down those skyrocketing prices.

      No. The long term trend for coal is down. The recent small increases are no bigger than previous fluctuations and mostly compensate for a small part of the reduction of nuclear power generation (the majority of which is compensated for by increased renewables.

      The good thing here is that renewables are almost at a point where they're viable even without subsidies, so you can "disagree" and spread the lies all you want: It won't matter. Wind and solar are taking off, whether you're on board or not.

    2. Re:Not so.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the cost of subsidizing solar and wind has doubled the cost of power in Germany. Not only is that inflicting pain on consumers, German manufacturing is finding it hard to compete with countries where energy is cheaper.

      The cost of power has to go up. Oil and gas is peaking. Coal is not, but adding that much CO2 to the atmosphere is not sustainable. So a switch away from cheap but useless power is mandatory. One way of getting the alternatives going, is to tax coal-based power to its death - and increase the price of energy a bit early. The political fallout can be handled. People will simply have to pay more. And you can tax imports from all countries that keep using coal. No problem there.

    3. Re:Not so.... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Actually, the cost of subsidizing solar and wind has doubled the cost of power in Germany

      Sure, although even now it isn't the most expensive in Europe. The cost will be high for a while, and Germans seem to accept that. Change costs money, but the end result is worth it.

      And Germany's power industry is increasing the amount of energy generated with coal.

      It's reducing the amount of coal burnt: http://energytransition.de/201...

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re: Not so.... by kenh · · Score: 2

      Forcing your local power company to buy your excess electricity at retail prices is a subsidy, is that going away?

      Are people paying full retail for their rooftop solar arrays? That is the measure of 'subsidies going away' - taking a 50% subsidy and dropping it to 40% isn't an example of subsidies 'going away'.

      --
      Ken
    5. Re:Not so.... by bluegutang · · Score: 1

      Actually, the cost of subsidizing solar and wind has doubled the cost of power in Germany. Not only is that inflicting pain on consumers, German manufacturing is finding it hard to compete with countries where energy is cheaper.

      If the subsidies funnel more money towards solar R&D... and that the same time weak Southern European economies are better able to compete with Germany due to Germany's high electricity costs, thus saving the euro... then everyone wins! Except German consumers.

    6. Re:Not so.... by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 2

      That's a useful chart, but it shows that the growth of coal in Germany is far larger than the total portion of solar. So if you want to call that growth a "fluctuation," you should call the contribution of solar a "rounding error" or something. What I learned from the chart is that in Germany, the burning of household trash produces twice as much power as solar, and this is growing much faster than solar. I bet it's also costing the customers far less and provides other benefits, like municipal hot water. So yes, Germany is having a bit of a trash burning revolution, and I applaud this. The solar thing though, I don't think that's going so well for Germany.

    7. Re:Not so.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have your eyes checked. Trash burning hardly registers on the chart.

      Note that the comment was in reply to the claim that "the cost of subsidizing solar and wind has doubled the cost of power". That's not just about solar. The subsidies are paid to all renewable energy sources (in the chart roughly from solar upwards). Note also that 2011, the first year the electricity production from coal increased again in Germany, was the year when Japan showed the world how safe nuclear power is in the hands of a high tech country, which prompted Germany to accelerate the plan to exit nuclear power generation by shutting down many power plants basically on the spot. The decrease in nuclear power is much bigger than the increase in coal fired power. The bigger rest is picked up by renewables. The increase in coal burning has absolutely nothing to do with the "skyrocketing prices" due to renewables.

      Btw, the effective premium for the subsidies (for all renewables, not just solar) is at most 2ct/kWh out of 26ct/kWh total when you include the effects of renewables on the wholesale price. Germany would be paying at least 24ct/kWh even if none of that "eco nonsense" had happened.

    8. Re:Not so.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue is massively overblown. An average one person household pays less than 50 EUR per month for electricity. That number is even lower per person in bigger households. The part of those 50 EUR per month that is due to renewable energy subsidies is less than 4 EUR. Many people on the dole are smokers and consume several packs of cigarettes per month. 4 EUR is the cost of one pack of cigarettes. A full tank of gas per month is more than the entire electricity cost per person.

  34. 37% increase this year by archer,+the · · Score: 1

    or 6.6 cents per kwh, from my utility's suppliers. I'm hoping this will encourage more rooftop and community solar.

    1. Re:37% increase this year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yep caused by green fuckery like this.

      And once your base load generators go out of business, welcome to the 18th century, candles and oil lamps, goodbye TV and computers....

      The dumb it burns!!

  35. Tax shifting by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Isn't that just shifting the depreciation advantage with the hardware?

    1. Re:Tax shifting by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      No, it is shifting the cost from the end user to the taxpayer.

  36. Good always prevails by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sometimes the world just works out.

  37. Gas price by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Natural gas does not seem to do all that well below $3/MMBTU so utilities will have to find less costly generation and lower prices if they want to retain their market share. Wind, and soon solar, could pin natural gas down to $3/MMBTU and start to cut its share, so utilities should be looking at these forms of generation to avoid losing custom to DIY.

  38. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How do you face everyday with this kind of pessimism? You must hate life, just waiting for it to end and enjoy it while you can, against these unstoppable forces of tyranny. Wow.

    I think efficiency and sustainability will cut the throat of the capitalism that enables/breeds/encourages this tyrannical style of government you speak of.

  39. ash by nicoleb_x · · Score: 2

    I wonder what will happen when some big volcanoes spew ash over most of the planet and solar energy production can't keep up with demand and the old, reliable energy production is gone? It's not like that has every happened, well 1816 sure, but it won't happen again.

    1. Re:ash by nicoleb_x · · Score: 1

      Brooms, really? Cloud scoops maybe...

  40. Blowback for Enron etc by dbIII · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Funny how power utilities are all for free market capitalism until the consumers get to play.
    Increasing price gouging has driven fees up while the capitial costs for consumers to generate their own electricity has gone down, with obvious results at the crossover point.

  41. Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 1, Troll

    In other words - when wind blows

    This keeps on coming up, and I get the feeling that Luckyo is a repeat offender despite knowing better, however I ask him to correct me if I'm wrong and he doesn't actually know better.

    The thing with wind, as any child who watches the TV weather knows, is that it is always blowing somewhere. It's never calm on the whole planet or even an entire country bigger than Monaco. Windmills are not just in one spot but spread around countries especially now that they've been adopted by electricity generators for a few years - thus there's always at least some wind power available when you want to bring a few more MW online. They may cost a shitload per MW but for when you just want a little bit more power that's a lot cheaper than warming up 500MW worth of coal, which comes in big packages or not at all.

    I think what we are seeing here is pointless tilting at windmills by armchair knights who see the windmills as evil giants (or green commie democrat lesbians, pick your fantasy opponent) instead of just a tool of the modern world that even Republicans are making money from.


    There may be some points of value in the rest of the post but such cretinism, either real or most likely feigned, makes the rest appear of no value due to proximity.

    1. Re:Here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The fix for unstable wind is hydroelectric plants. They can be switched on/off at a moments notice. When there is more wind than you need, pump water up from sea level to your mountain reservoir. When the wind dies, use power from that reservoir. This is how you average out the wind, with 90% efficiency. Averaging over days, weeks or the whole year if you like. And if there is any rain above your reservoir, you get some extra hydroelectric power as well.

      Germany has plenty of mountains, they could do this if they wanted to. Dams are expensive, but nice to have once built.

    2. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, that's incorrect. Pump storage is completely incompatible with modern renewables because of the way it's designed to work. Turbines and pumps cannot be directionally switched easily, so the process for switching directions is designed to be done twice a day - pump water during the night, flush water through turbine during the day. It's a predictable cycle, so directional shifting can be planned in advance and executed.

      Renewables would require near instant mode switching. Which is incompatible with aforementioned systems, and as a result, Germany is actually shutting down its pumped energy storage gradually.

    3. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This is standard modus operandi for three local trolls: angelsphere, dblll and amimojo. Use the arguments that look like they make sense to a layman, advance them with yellow press-style arguments and finish off by questioning the intelligence of anyone who dares to point out flaws.

      Here dblll relies on relative ignorance of most people of how grids and grid stability actually works. Instead he simplifies the model to make it look feasible to a layman - grid is essentially a pool after all, and surely if there's input somewhere, it would balance out the lack of input at another location?

      In general, that is indeed correct, and how grid is generally balanced. But as with all engineering problems, devil is in the details. And details make his model utterly ridiculous and completely unfeasible. The problems here is DISTANCE and LOCALIZATION OF PRODUCTION.

      Most of German wind power is located in the North. Most of the consumption is in the South-West. This means that power must be pushed over large distances, with a lot of transformers and substations balancing the flow. And when the supply suddenly dies, it takes a while for automation to switch back. At the same time, the sheer volume that tends to go offline at once is quite large, as production is concentrated in certain regions. As a result, if you do not have spinning reserve in the producing regions, by the time switching brought you power from the South, your grid in the North is already down and you have countless transformer fires if you tried to keep it up regardless.

      Nuclear has the exact same problem actually. We here in Finland are currently building a 1.6GW unit in Olkiluoto. As nuclear is far more reliable, we need much less than that capacity of installed spinning reserve, so if his hypothesis of "distance doesn't matter" was true, we could just increase our imports from Russia, Sweden and Estonia to make the shortfall. We have very good connections to all of these countries and routinely both import and export power.

      In real world on the other hand, we had to build a 300MW power plant in Forssa, about half way between the new plant in Western Finland, and major consumption centres in Central Finland and Helsinki to provide the spinning reserve for this new unit. Because distance matters.

    4. Re:Here we go again by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      You can easily look for total actual wind generation profile charts on the net, with a simple Google effort, and you can see the immense variability within a day, a week, etc. Despite what you want to believe, the "wind is always blowing" thing is quite far from reality. Windmills overall, however, are proving to be much better than solar in terms of cost performance.

    5. Re:Here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Russia and Finland hate each other, and Russia is currently warring with neighboring countries.

      I doubt the average Finn trusts Russia to keep your national power supply running via imports. It seems that YOU do, however, I congratulate you on your incredible faith in Russia.

    6. Re:Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 2

      And when the supply suddenly dies, it takes a while for automation to switch back.

      True, it's not entirely simple, yet somehow Grandpa did the job with a telephone. It's gotten a lot easier since. Having a huge number widely distributed of DC power sources on people's roofs that can produce AC with whatever timing you want has made it easier again. With the huge number of mostly idle gas turbines all over the place it's almost trivial today, even more so if there's some hydro.
      I wish you wouldn't make up a pile of technobabble to try to pretend that up is down. Since you are pretending to be too dumb to understand a weather chart why do you have to gall to call for an overcomplicated model of a grid?

      your grid in the North is already down and you have countless transformer fires if you tried to keep it up regardless.

      What a silly fantasy. Stick to your day job.

    7. Re:Here we go again by davester666 · · Score: 2

      Um, no. It takes a fair amount of time to start/stop hydroelectric plants.

      And then there is the whole matter of pumping the ocean to the mountains. At 90% efficiency.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    8. Re:Here we go again by archer,+the · · Score: 1

      I agree with using renewables first. It bypasses the "subsidies" that the fossil fuel industry receive.

      An article at Forbes reports that coal increases health care costs by 19 to 45 cents a kwh. Oil increases the costs by 8 to 19 c/kwh, and natural gas by 1 to 2 c/kwh. Mercury in fish is getting bad enough that Consumer Reports had an article on it last month. I'm pretty sure fish aren't mining mercury. Then there's the climate change issue.

      Any one of those reasons, from three different sources, is good enough for me to prefer renewables over fossil fuels. For nuclear, I haven't decided yet, but I'm leaning in the direction of it being sold at the same time as renewable, not after all renewable supply is consumed.

    9. Re:Here we go again by radl33t · · Score: 1

      That plant is a great example. Lets talk about the project schedule and costs. We're at 200% construction time ant 300% budget? ~4x cost of solar and 20x construction time. Nice.

    10. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Not sure if ignorant or stupid.

      Here, educate yourself:

      http://www.fingrid.fi/fi/sahko...

      Russia has been an extremely reliable partner in energy for Finland ever since WW2. We rely on them 100% for natural gas and significantly for electricity. No significant outages since WW2.

    11. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      TVO and Areva are talking to each other through lawyers only now too. Problem was that Areva usually didn't do full top down management of its nuclear projects - instead French state energy company did. This was their first, and they boned it, hard.

      On a bright side, this was a "full delivery with keys to the payee" (finnish idiom, not sure about english analogy, basically means that builder is fully responsible for the project start to finish and paying company just accepts the final delivery) kind of a deal, so it look like the only question now is how much Areva will be compensating TVO for the delays. And it's worth noting that TVO liked the project so much, in spite of all the delays, that they are in a massive rage in our media right now because government denied them a prolongation to their application for building a fourth unit in Olkiluoto. Their current one expires in late 2015, and they want more time to finish Olkiluoto 3 before they concentrate on getting final plans for Olkiluoto 4 nailed down.

    12. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      On a general level, I'm in agreement. CO2 emissions of coal cannot be dodged, though to be fair, most of the other problems with coal have already been tackled in Europe. Acid rains are no longer a problem with newer plants, nor are particles emitted any more. Older plants that had to be fired to match up Energiewende didn't meet those requirements, and there are quite a few older plants that really need to be upgraded or mothballed and new ones built.

      So coal burning needs to be reduced to a minimum. But power must be produced. Which doesn't leave Europe with many choices, and after Germany turned away from nuclear, it doomed itself to coal, under the guise of "renewables". This is the part of the approach that I disagree with.

    13. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I defined your trolling very clearly in the first sentence of the post:

      Use the arguments that look like they make sense to a layman, advance them with yellow press-style arguments and finish off by questioning the intelligence of anyone who dares to point out flaws.

      For example if I were to stoop to your level, my argument would not be about the topic being discussed, but go among the lines of "well we know why you're a FORMER electricity industry engineer now, don't we?"

    14. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Wait, you claim to be "electricity industry engineer" and you... don't even know that keeping generator's transformers in the grid when there's a fall out of large supply of power causes transformer fires because you can't keep the AC frequency in proper phase as the load on the remaining sources increases beyond tolerance levels? Which is why blackouts happen when a large enough supplier suddenly goes offline - because producers after experiencing overload switch off automatically when their generator goes out of phase.

      You don't even know how expensive it is to pull high gauge high voltage lines and the necessary transformer units to get high voltage + keeping high volt AC in phase over long distances for moving large amounts of electricity? You don't know how expensive the automation behind the grid logistics that manages the whole is? You call those costs and efforts "trivial"?

      I will indeed stick to my daily job, but I don't claim to be an "electricity industry engineer". I just have notable amount of understanding of how things generally work. You on the other hand are making such claim, and yet you appear to be utterly ignorant of the very basics of realities of electricity production and electric grids.

      You must wonder every day, why all these "trivial" things aren't done well outside wealthy countries.

    15. Re: Here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until Finland becomes the next Ukraine with their expansion-happy mindset.

    16. Re: Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Right. Because we're known as the guys who have shitty relations with Russia, a large Russian minority that can be used to undermine our state from within, and are complete pushovers because we're not in NATO who's known to save people from evil Russian bear and not threaten to stab them in the back with tactical nukes on their main cities in case USSR ever decides to attack...

      In real life on the other hand... Yeah, the exact opposite on all fronts.

      Seriously, are you pretending, or are you really that stupid? In case you are, here's a little hint why Russians actually respect us, and why we had good relations with them ever since WW2 and all the way until today:
      http://img.chan4chan.com/img/2...

    17. Re:Here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's what's happening in the real world.
      http://www.bloomberg.com/news/...

      Germany's power production has gotten to be so unreliable that they are paying companies to shut down during
      drops and add usage during surges. They are being paid up to 400 times the whole sale price.
      Variable pricing is similarly done in the USA as well - offer variable prices during peak periods, and even paying industrial users if they shut down during extreme peak times, but it's nothing like what's happening in Germany. In the USA, it's done to hold down costs. In Germany it's being done to maintain stability of the grid, which is basing the grid's stability on faith, hope, and trust that those users will comply everytime it's needed.

      So, the industrial users have found a way out: build their own generation
      http://online.wsj.com/news/art...
      "Every sixth company in Europe's largest economy now generates its own electricity, roughly 50% more than one year ago, according to Germany's Chamber of Commerce and Industry."

      And damage to industrial equipment:
      http://instituteforenergyresea...

    18. Re:Here we go again by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      And you are omitting the trillions spent by the military to defend "oil interests".

      The middle east would be a non-factor in global politics if the price of oil collapsed.

      For the U.S. from 2000-2010, you need to add in about 2 trillion dollars in subsidies for oil and then another 200 million per year until all the veterans of those actions die.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    19. Re:Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 1

      In Germany it's being done to maintain stability of the grid, which is basing the grid's stability on faith, hope, and trust that those users will comply everytime it's needed.

      Yet it's holding up better than both coasts of North America. Funny about that isn't it? Maybe you've been fed propaganda?

    20. Re:Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You did exactly that in a previous exchange :)

    21. Re:Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Renewables would require near instant mode switching

      You really are laying on the unrealistic assumptions today. First the wind stops blowing over entire continents and now pump storage needs magical powers before it's of any use at all.

    22. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Audience appears to disagree, judging by the moderation. You appear very much alone in your rather absurd assumption.

    23. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Since when is complex automation system, notable increase in complexity of gearbox mechanism and general strengthening of the pumps and turbines to handle acceleration cycles to operational speed better "magic"?

      Though it is indeed said that to an ignorant, engineering feats appear to be magical.

    24. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Oil =! coal.

      Coal is available in great abundance in Europe and North America.

    25. Re:Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Audience appears to disagree, judging by the moderation.

      More than five hours later that comment above yours is untouched either way yet you wrote that, so the "audience", if there is any by this point, either does not care or does not disagree enough to bother using mod points. I really do not get the point of such an obvious and petty lie.

    26. Re:Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Oh you were referring to the post way above - I'd say it got marked as such because of the way I called out your lie. It's more of a refutation of a troll comment that makes people uncomfortable than a troll itself IMHO. Some people see it as feeding the trolls but I see it as a warning that there is a fanboy who is prepared to lie becuase "the ends justify the means" on the loose.

    27. Re:Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 1

      When you are dealing with spinning things capable of driving a generator at hundreds of megawatts and you want to reverse them in a second and still remain intact then magic is what you would need :)
      Of course you don't need such a magic thing unless a cloud magically appears from New York to L.A. or a calm magically falls over a continent in an instant. You are going to great lengths here to oppose an alternative energy other than the one you like. It's fine being a fanboy, I've been a big fan of the nuclear waste disposal material synroc since the 1980s, what's not fine is stupid lies about what you see as the opposition.

    28. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      So let me see.

      Now that I caught you in your bullshit, you'll pretend that you actually agreed, rather than disagreed with my original statement and use completely irrelevant factoids about... nuclear waste disposal as additional argument?

      Are you perhaps drunk? You seem to be jumping between topics that are completely unconnected to one another, and you seem to assume that no one can look at your post just two tiers up.

    29. Re:Here we go again by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      And coal currently kills 4000 people a year and has a lot of externalities that it doesn't pay for so it's price is artificially low.

      However- to the best of my knowledge we are not having multi trillion dollar wars over coal so there is that.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    30. Re:Here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Germany it's being done to maintain stability of the grid, which is basing the grid's stability on faith, hope, and trust that those users will comply everytime it's needed.

      Yet it's holding up better than both coasts of North America. Funny about that isn't it? Maybe you've been fed propaganda?

      RE:

      Yet it's holding up better than both coasts of North America.

      I provided links regarding the problems that are being experienced in Germany.
      You imply that coastal USA is experiencing worse problems than Germany is experiencing. Provide evidence or we will know that you are simply spewing made-up bullshit.

    31. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I strongly suspect it kills quite a bit more than that mainly because of mercury bio-accumulation in sea life and prevalence of basic coal power plants in developing countries.

      But these problems are avoidable through high tech coal plants like the newer ones that manage burning process carefully and filter exhaust extensively. CO2 emissions on the other hand are an unavoidable part of coal burning, and in the long run, they will be a major problem.

      But it's highly unlikely we're going to have wars over coal any time soon. Last I read, Europe alone has enough coal to last it at least two to three hundred years. And Europe has been aggressively mining coal and survived two world wars where coal was of paramount importance as fuel for power plants and heating needed for metal refining. And one has to remember that "real cost" of almost anything is usually more than financial cost, and typically very difficult to accurately measure.

    32. Re:Here we go again by dbIII · · Score: 1
      You are the one with the ridiculous assertions yet you are calling me drunk - funny isn't it?

      You seem to be jumping between topics that are completely unconnected to one another

      Yet they are all replies to items you have raised, funny isn't it?

      Why don't you display at least some shred of honesty and own up as to why you think it's worth lying about alternative energies other than the one you like. The no wind thing is especially funny but you've topped it with the magic instant autoreversing pump storage that nobody needs.

    33. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Right, because as you claimed in another part of this thread, "wind power generation is reduced at peak times to compensate" when your ridiculous claims were hit by hard numbers and you tried to deny them. So there's no need for "instant direction change" mechanisms like batteries and supercapacitors to back up wind and solar, and all that research into it is just ignorant and misplaced.

      In case you already "forgot":
      http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

      It was yet another hilarious example of your utter ignorance of the subject.

    34. Re:Here we go again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and who pays to keep the gas turbines ready and maintained.

      talk about fucking fantasy...

    35. Re:Here we go again by ichthyoboy · · Score: 1

      Why would you need to worry about directional shifting? Pump water up in one pipe, release water down in another pipe that contains a turbine. No directional shifting necessary. There was a nice article on NPR the other day about a Spanish island doing exactly this: http://www.npr.org/blogs/paral...

    36. Re:Here we go again by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Because the older plants are not designed for this, and such a design adds significant level of complexity to the system.

      Older plants essentially use the same path for both flow directions, which provides significant cost savings in building and maintenance and is completely sufficient for what they were designed for - selling night time produced electricity during the day.

  42. It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by dbIII · · Score: 1

    It's energy and there are pockets to be filled in Washington - of course there are subsidies.

    1. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 0

      Yes, and the subsidies for solar and wind are bigger than anything any other energy source has ever seen. In terms of percentage of construction cost, or percentage of power generated, any way you choose, solar gets an ENORMOUS subsidy. If you gave 1/3 the equivalent percentage to nuclear, for instance, you'd see a mass rush to build.

      You can pretend all subsidies are equal if you want. Fact is, almost every country subsidizes its energy infrastructure in different ways because low cost, reliable energy is a key to economic security as well as quality of life.

    2. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by dbIII · · Score: 2

      Yes, and the subsidies for solar and wind are bigger than anything any other energy source has ever seen.

      Equal? All those government loans for big nuke and thermal coal projects dwarf just about everything outside of defence.

    3. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 0

      I doubt you can show any numbers that show on a cost per KWH or cost for construction basis that money directly supporting commercial nuclear (or coal for that matter) is anywhere near the levels supporting solar. The new nuclear plants under construction are not getting anywhere near the over 30% tax break, and retail level feed-in tariffs or production credits on a per Kwh basis. Those incentives don't exist. You can make all the generalized claims you want.

    4. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by dbIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Banks don't put up loans for nuclear plants. Guess where the interest free loans and insurance comes from. Solar and wind are peanuts in comparison.

    5. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Add up the the value of those benefits and then calculate based on a percentage of construction cost or KWH generation, and it will be nowhere near what solar is getting.

    6. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by dbIII · · Score: 1

      True but the discussion appeared to be about total investment instead of proportional.

    7. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Proportional is the only thing that makes sense to me. Actually, proportional to GWH generation is the fairest approach, since simple capacity is not a good comparison measure.

      I actually have no problem with subsidies for solar and wind. I think they are too high, and the associated production credits are damaging market models, but the concept is OK to me. I don't like the unfairness of residential solar subsidies, I've state my case there, but again, there are good reasons to subsidize power. But when people take the effects of huge subsides on the market and point to them as a success of the technology alone, I am going to point out the fact that actual cost is being lost in the discussion.

    8. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Once again - peak load is a problem that is harder to solve than base load and money has to come from somewhere, thus proportional to GW/h may not give the best outcome.
      However some alternative energy subsidies such as the residential ones do have a bit of a "bread and circuses" scent to them. There is a return but the final outcome would probably be similar without throwing money in that direction.

      I am going to point out the fact that actual cost is being lost in the discussion.

      The subsidies are a carrot for the consumers to pay the high capital cost of photovolatiacs on their roofs instead of the state putting up capital to build new generators or providing a carrot to induce private enterprise to build new generators. Over the long term it looks like a waste of money, but it's a consequece of short term thinking and poorly managing state granted monopolies to private enterprise, where maximum profit comes from sitting on existing capacity and charging consumers more for it each quarter.
      We're really discussing the dirty end of economics which is about handing out something hard to distinguish from blatant bribes to drive outcomes. I don't like it either.

    9. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by AK+Marc · · Score: 1
      The oil companies receive more than the solar and wind companies do. Power is not subsidized equally.

      If you gave 1/3 the equivalent percentage to nuclear, for instance, you'd see a mass rush to build.

      Nuclear got (gets?) more than solar ever did. The liability limits, guaranteed loans, and such are worth billions. Nuclear is uneconomical in the US because the for-profit nuclear companies want a 10% return on day-1, and a plant takes 10+ years to build in the curent regulatory environment. If you can build a plant, it's profitable, but nobody is trying. The subsidies are already there, but the wrong ones for the investment landscape.

    10. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Try calculating it on a per unit basis, relative to the amount of power generated or built. Solar and Wind see way more. If the point is to actually generate electricity, nuclear has paid back many times over, while solar and wind are still a net cost.

    11. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Wind doesn't get that much. Solar gets some, but still not as much as fossil fuels. The large grants for home solar look to be almost non existent now.

    12. Re:It's energy and there are pockets in Washington by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Solar gets over 30% initial construction and installation costs PAID FOR by tax subsidy. On top of that, forced production credits at RETAIL rates for an indefinite period are provide for most. Nuclear does not, nor has ever gotten anything like that.

      Nuclear produces over 40 time the electrical power as solar, but gets nowhere near 40 times toatl subsidies. Not even close.

      A typical nuclear unit pays about $10 million in property taxes, and employs hundreds of highly educated employees with high paying jobs. Nuclear is a net positive in total tax paid vs. subsidy.

      A large portion of the solar subsidy goes to Asia to pay for the panels and, in the case of residential solar, to pay an individuals power bill, a luxury many people are not in position to take advantage of. Solar is a net negative.

      When solar shuts down every night, nuclear is there.

  43. Smoke Screen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Most people have this preconceived notion of 'what we need' and we in the first world are all in reality 'rich'. I live on less than minimum wage in a cold climate, and built a 750+- square foot home, off-grid with a design based on 2KWh/day but can generate 4+ most sunny days... With exception to some industrial/manufacturing facilities, if you have some southern exposure you can live off-grid and it be very affordable, it's just a question of changing our wasteful power consumption habits or paying more in solar setup.

    Stuff I run, Fridge, laptop, inet, security cameras, microwave, digital pressure cooker, washer, well pump, dishwasher(no heat cycle), typical household tools... $150 backup gas generator if it's necessary(hasn't been). Wood stove for heat, cooking.

    Oh, also I have a utility pole 20 feet away, but SKIPPING the required taxes/connect fees and forced 'certified labor' to actually get electricity paid for more than half my solar setup...

    If the general home owning public ever 'wakes up', utilities should fear for their profits, tho. I think most people are imprisoned in condo/apts and city life, so it's not like they are going to go out of business.

    1. Re:Smoke Screen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people have this preconceived notion of 'what we need'

      It's not what I need, its what I want. I want a big flat panel TV set in every room. A Jacuzzi and pool with pumps and heat. AC running all summer and heat pumps in the winter.

      Go ahead and raise my rates. I'll pay them. And then conspicuous electricity consumption will be a sign of wealth. And us rich folk will snicker while all the plebes try to read using one LED while we light our places up with 150 Watt incandescent bulbs.

    2. Re:Smoke Screen by Tokolosh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wood stove for heat, cooking.

      That wood stove is generating more pollution than 100 grid-connected houses, I wager. If every home had one, the forests would be gone and the air quality worse than China.

      --
      Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
    3. Re:Smoke Screen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      tell me about the wood fired pollution.
      Notice any massive fires in California lately.....

      wood burner myself...with catalytic converter .97 emissions.

      fatalistically satisfying heat.

  44. Re:cut utility profits from 8% to 41% by dbIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Rooftop solar flattens the daytime peak and cuts down on the maximum capacity needed to be produced and transmitted (along wires of course, but that's the word) from other places, so it does eventually pay for itself even when the money thrown at it is excessive. A bit of a problem is that throwing excessive amounts of money around builds political influence, but that's not a solar problem per se. Stop throwing money at it and they'll still be some takeup, especially in areas where utilities are indulging in excessive price gouging.

  45. Crossing nonsubscribers' land to reach subscribers by tepples · · Score: 1

    In a pure capitalist system, a utility would have to negotiate with the private owner of each plot of land that the utility lines cross in order to pull the utility's conduit across that plot of land. Eminent domain is socialist.

  46. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by dbIII · · Score: 1

    I too have off-the-grid dreams as a house-owner

    It's not that far off for city dwellers since batteries suck less with every passing year. In areas just off the grid the dream was real in the 1990s - some people I know were told it would be $100k to get a line in for them and their neighbours so they went solar plus mini-hydro.

  47. Buy cheap, sell dear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Utilities need to shift some of their capital budget from building traditional power plants to buying and connecting the new metallic or flow super-batteries. Then they can buy renewable energy cheaply when it's abundant, and sell it at a profit when it's not available. Their current business model is not practical anymore. Energy storage technology is the place to invest.

  48. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by dfm3 · · Score: 1

    I too have off-the-grid dreams as a house-owner, but the power companies always find a way, same thing with the electrical car that could run on water. Lobbyist will manipulate (read: FORCE) politicians into their direction, so you'll be depending on them one way or the other.

    Huh? I guess there are places where you are required by law to hook up your house to the power grid, but nobody can force you to USE electricity. What's to stop you from just keeping the main breaker switched off?

    I've actually known more than one person who didn't have utility power to their house, and they made it just fine. One of them engineered a small hydroelectric turbine system using a small creek that flowed across their land (they had several hundred acres in the North Carolina mountains) which they used to power a small refrigerator and occasionally a computer. The other used a collection of lead-acid car batteries which they charged up using a solar panel, then could hook up to an inverter as they needed.

  49. Utility Markets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While the electric utilities are regulated at the consumer level, to ensure the statutory rate of return is achievable, regulation at the wholesale level is quite different.
    Looking at the rate structures, one could decompose the things that the retail cost is composed of and create a rate structure that would work with a significant amount of distributed energy supply. things that come to mind are

    Energy (kWhr)
    Reactive Power (VARS)
    demand (maximum power draw in 15 minute period kW)
    Spinning reserve (grid inertia)
    Frequency Stability
    Supply vs demand balancing
    Energy Time of day shifting
    Wheeling (moving power from one user to another)

    I suppose we will just need to see what gets presented to the public utility commission.

  50. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by kamapuaa · · Score: 1

    Currently, of course the government is actually heavily subsidizing solar power for the home. Not taxing it out of existence.

    --
    Slashdot: providing anti-social weirdos a soapbox, since 1997.
  51. Private Solar becomming illegal by Gim+Tom · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In Georgia both the PSC and the legislature is being lobbied hard to effectively outlaw private solar installations at the same time that the utilities are running a PR Blitz about how much they are working on solar energy. Having the most corrupt governor in the country doesn't help things here either

  52. Here in Arizona by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    they ran scary commercials targeted at clueless old people about the dangers of over regulation so they could pass laws that let them stop paying people for the power they generated and bill them a fee for having solar connected to the grid. I'm genuinely embarrassed to say it worked...

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  53. Hell To Pay by JimSadler · · Score: 2

    The self generating community will create a hop scotch issue for power delivery. You might be the only one on your block that needs power from the grid. So power delivery will rise in cost rather sharply while power delivery is required for less and less homes. Power companies will have their backs to the wall as any raise in costs will bring on an even faster trend of homes to be self supplying. Ultimately power companies will go out of business as far as home supply is concerned. But the catch is that large industrial plants will want power from a central supply vendor. So we will probably see some type of power companies formed to supply large factories or factories that need huge power to operate such as steel mills. Change will always bring pain and suffering to someone. It will be a sort of war for a while not unlike what the railroads faced back in 1850 when land was usurped to make rails possible.

    1. Re:Hell To Pay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hope you enjoy living like it's the 1850's.

      As that's what it will lead too....

      (candles, oil lamps, indoor pollution and health problems...)

      dumb so dumb, winding back civilization to the stone age...

  54. Profits a function of regulations by kenh · · Score: 1

    First off, the current system of forcing utilities to buy excess electricity generated by distributed photovoltaic cells at a premium is the one thing that likely will impact power company PROFITS. For those not familiar with this, in the US (at least, not sure of other markets) power companies buy your unused power you put on to the grid at a price that is above the retail price your neighbors will pay for their electricity from the utility. THAT policy, coupled with extremely generous incentives from the government is what makes photovoltaic cells an 'affordable' power source.

    Second, utility company profit is typically regulated to be a percentage of revenues, and reduced sales (because of conservation, self-generation, or whatever) will reduce power company revenue, but profits will remain at the regulated percentage of revenue. (Back when AT&T was *the* phone company, they enjoyed a federally guaranteed profit of around 6% of revenue. They couldn't make more than 6% profit on phone service, but they could keep raising rates until they hit 6% profit. Six percent isn't an unreasonable profit, but when it is guaranteed, it is great. This helps explain why the phone company did so much research and paid such high salaries - these increased costs required increases in revenue, which increased profits.)

    The thing that hurts the power company are the regulations, not the lost sales:

    Install solar panels on your roof, gov't covers half of the cost (50% discount)

    Generate electricity with those solar panels, sell the excess to power company at premium (retail plus) price.

    Forcing the power company to buy electricity it doesn't want when it doesn't need it and can't predict or rely on it is what will kill their profits, not you buying less electricity on sunny days with your federally discounted solar panel array on the roof.

    --
    Ken
    1. Re:Profits a function of regulations by anorlunda · · Score: 1

      Second, utility company profit is typically regulated to be a percentage of revenues, and reduced sales (because of conservation, self-generation, or whatever) will reduce power company revenue, but profits will remain at the regulated percentage of revenue.

      No. Not a percent of revenues, but rather a percent of investment. A critical difference in this context because falling revenues will not cause falling profits.

    2. Re:Profits a function of regulations by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 2

      For those not familiar with this, in the US (at least, not sure of other markets) power companies buy your unused power you put on to the grid at a price that is above the retail price your neighbors will pay for their electricity from the utility.

      I know of no part of the US market that requires that. At worst (for the power company), the law requires paying retail price. In many states, the law only requires paying the wholesale price. The utility is not required to pay the retail price to a homeowner in those states. And in quite a few states, there is no law requiring the utility to pay at all. Net metering does not exist and any excess power generated by a homeowner is a dead loss. The power company takes it without even a thank you.

      The US is not the monolithic energy market you seem to believe. States vary, and requirements vary even within states, and there is no national law on the subject at all. Your belief about the mandated rates is flat out wrong. There is no such requirement.

  55. Which PROVES they are making excess profits? by Bruce66423 · · Score: 1

    The fact that the UK's gas and electricity prices are among the cheaper in the EU is a hint that there's not a lot of price gouging going on, as does the relative failure of the cooperative buying efforts local authorities have organised. Of course it's attractive to blame the providers when price rises happen, and there IS a suggestion that they don't lower prices as rapidly as they might when wholesale prices fall. but I'm less than convinced that the CEGB and the regional electricity boards would have been any better.Yes Labour got itself a nice little bounce at the polls by proposing a price freeze when in its manifesto for the next election; the most probable effect of that is that all the companies increase their prices beforehand

    1. Re:Which PROVES they are making excess profits? by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      Cheaper relative to economies that are serious about tackling pollution problems perhaps but when bills go up by 15% a year and profits rocket for you to then say that there is no gouging going on is naive to say the least. I'm also not keen on subsidising French and German energy customers either. Any profits gained from a system that was paid for by British taxpayers should be used for the benefit of British taxpayers.

  56. Re:cut utility profits from 8% to 41% by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    Solar can fill part of the daytime peak, but other source are required to step in when solar wanes in late afternoon or on cloudy days. Then, of course, gas, coal, or nuclear are there to save the day. That is just fine as long as folks don't ignore the associated cost factors. But, I agree the way money gets thrown around distorts the market, invites mis-use, and political influence. Our energy policy should be fact based; cost, risk, reliability, diversity, environmental impact all need to be considered, but unfortunately the US hasn't had a energy policy based on those factors for over 25 years (if every).

  57. Yes, but the peak determines network design by dbIII · · Score: 2

    Yes, but the peak determines network design and the capacity you plan for. Cutting that peak back does save money in a "fact based" way if you want to use such language.

    1. Re:Yes, but the peak determines network design by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      The distribution network already is there, and anything more than a incremental addition is rarely ever needed. So, a fact based approach should also include the appropriate use of existing assets.

    2. Re:Yes, but the peak determines network design by dbIII · · Score: 1

      and anything more than a incremental addition is rarely ever needed

      It's hard to incrementally increase the diameter of a transmission line cable :)
      Network design is ongoing.

    3. Re:Yes, but the peak determines network design by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      They replace, or add new lines to the network on a piecemeal basis, which I consider incremental in the big picture. Call it what you want, they existing infrastructure is not changing very much when you look at the entirety.

  58. Net metering by Strange+Attractor · · Score: 1

    I don't know what's going on in Germany now. Thirty years ago, according to a German I knew, you had to pay for the power you didn't use if you generated your own.

    But bringing up spinning reserve and dispatch issues is helpful. The research paper from LBL that spawned the Cmputer world article has the title "Financial Impacts of Net-Metered PV on Utilities and Ratepayers: A Scoping Study of Two Prototypical U.S. Utilities". The key is "Net-Metered". In the two locations that I know about, customers are paid at least the same price per kilowatt-hour for energy that they provide as they pay for energy that they consume regardless of time. Since the cost of energy in electrical power girds changes over time, such pricing is not appropriate. Also as Luckyo points out, there is a cost for providing "spinning reserve" which is the capability of providing additional power on a fraction of a second's notice. Such reserve is necessary in order to have reliable power delivered to variable loads.

    1. Re:Net metering by stabiesoft · · Score: 1

      Nope, in austin it is fairly easy to end up paying for energy you produce. When monthly usage exceeds 1000kwh, you pay 12.9c/kwh but you only received 10.7c/kwh for the energy produced by your panels. You stilll pay such wonderful extra tariffs like community benefit charges on total kwh used as well making the 12.9c go even higher. At the 500-1000 usage level it is more equal with the utility charging 11.7c/kwh. So the computation is not total usage - solar generation = charged usage. It is total usage x normal tariff - solar generation x solar rate = your bill. I was rather pissed when they changed to the new model. Previously it was net metered. And to add to the insult, they reserve the right to change the solar rate paid to you at whim. Previously they paid 12.7c/kwh which worked out to about even after you factor in all the other taxes etc they charge. I have to say, when I moved here, I put austin energy at the top of the heap for utilities and thought city run power was a good idea. After the baffoons wasted 60 mil on the new billing system that does not work, restructured the solar rates, and hoover cash from the utility to pay city shortfalls, I'd rank them as the absolute worst utility in history.

  59. So no example is valid? by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Examples are examples. Why are mine, tested by the courts, invalid, but your untested ones somehow are?

    1. Re:So no example is valid? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Because your example is irrelevant, as it addresses apparent corruption within the system. We are talking about technical aspects of a completely different problem.

      Car analogy: We talk about tyre grip on various roads using different tyres on a certain BMW model. You come in and tell us not to buy BMW because you had one and it had a problem with changing oil, then wonder why we tell you that your example is irrelevant.

      As I noted above, this is standard yellow-press denial.

  60. Not a point source by dbIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With respect, take a look at a chart showing air pressure across your continent. Consider what it means in terms of wind, especially since windmills are spread out quite a bit now. The "wind is always blowing" thing is reality on the scale of a continental grid, even an electricity grid in Europe since there are such large interconnections between countries. If you look at a North American air pressure chart and the size of the US+Canada grid it's even more obvious.
    I've never had anything to do with windmills and don't even like them much but I'm sick of all the politically motivated bullshit attacking anything in power generation that is seen as remotely "green", and that's why I called the GP poster to task for his bullshit.

    1. Re:Not a point source by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      I said look at ACTUAL total generation charts that are out there. How can real numbers be bullshit? Please, explain why you would ignore REAL NUMBERS!

    2. Re:Not a point source by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      http://www.ise.fraunhofer.de/e... Look at slide 38, wind totals for German Wind production. Argue with them if you don't believe it.

    3. Re:Not a point source by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      If you follow up this thread (and several others on this topic), you'll notice that dblll is a known troll with an agenda. He talks about generalist stuff that sounds like it would make sense to a person who doesn't understand the details of power generation to promote wind and solar. When he's called out on his incorrect claims, he uses various forms of obfuscation, like claiming "these numbers are okay, but they signify something different", as he does below with "wind filling up the peaks" argument, when it's extremely obvious to anyone in who ever researched the topic that wind is always on full power and it's the coal and natural gas that are usually filling up the peaks of wind when it falls off the grid.

    4. Re:Not a point source by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      I know. I just like to show the rest of folks how utterly easy it can be to show real facts that prove him wrong. He fell right into it, and now he's gonna come up with some new BS that he can't show any source for, or he'll just quit.

    5. Re:Not a point source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bollocks,

      Just look at UK wind production for September, fucking shite compared to the ridiculous cost.

      Just a bunch of fucking subsidy farmers who get paid for not producing electricity....

      Do you happen to be one of them, or invested in them Dbill?

    6. Re:Not a point source by dbIII · · Score: 1

      With respect, your own source does not show what you assert it to say. I have not fallen into anything other than perhaps a game of fools who do not care what the reality is on the topic.

    7. Re:Not a point source by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      The only fool in this game is you, who makes contentions with no basis other than your own perception of how you would like things to be.

  61. Someone call Smithers! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's time for power companies to deploy the Burns-esque solar-blocking dishes to thwart solar power.

  62. One last thing by dbIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In general, that is indeed correct, and how grid is generally balanced. But as with all engineering problems, devil is in the details. And details make his model utterly ridiculous and completely unfeasible. The problems here is DISTANCE and LOCALIZATION OF PRODUCTION.

    So you are arguing against widely distributed small generators on that basis? They provide LOCALIZATION OF PRODUCTION by their very nature, so I suggest you be a bit more honest about your reason for objecting to them.

    As nuclear is far more reliable

    It's a base load solution with a large capacity and is very expensive to turn off and on for peaks where you need a bit more capacity. Anybody who raves on about "one true energy" whether it is solar, wind, nuclear or coal is either selling something or has been conned - the answer is a mix of energy sources. It's cheaper to fire up a gas turbine (or several) than an entire coal or nuclear base load unit if you don't need the full capacity of a base load unit. Although wind has a lot of drawbacks it has a niche. Although photovoltaics are very expensive they now also have a place and are making a positive impact.

    1. Re:One last thing by radl33t · · Score: 1

      PV is not expensive. PV capital equipment costs 0.04-0.05 $/kWh over its (conservative) lifetime. Lowest in the industry soft costs can put PV on your roof at about 0.09-0.11 $/kWh under average solar insolation, which is extremely competitive to retail grid rates all over the country, which are usually cited without mentioning their accompanying ~11-14% taxes and 1.6-20% fixed fees. Equipment is cheap, installation can be cheap, and presently the cost of PV is most sensitive to the cost of capital. PV is generally cashflow positive based on HELOC rates. aka, it is a positive investment from day 1 for residential owners of good credit standing, and probably an excellent diversification investment for middle class - upper middle class families). Already some large firms (SunEdison) (SolarCity) and numerous foreign project developers have been successful in getting access to capital at rates (and of similar scope) as existing utilities. And their PV is cheap. Billions of dollars is flowing into solar financing, especially in regions where it isn't heavy political competition with the inertia of existing infrastructure. Thus one alternative answer may be "one true energy" if enabled by very cheap storage and extreme energy efficiency. Diurnally cycling 100 $/kWh storage, 10 $/kWh weekly and 1 $/kWh seasonal storage solves most problems of one true energy, especially paired with 40-60-80% deep energy retrofits. Compared to today, it is likely that advanced battery technology will absolutely crush the payback of next major round of expansion or replacement of major transmission and generation systems. Radical changes will be possible due to competitive technology and economics. Whether they are realized is another point. The modular nature of PV and advanced battery systems are doomsday for the centralized grid because economies of scale have already been realized. Equipment costs of PV reached the magic number almost 2 years ago and roadmaps, which have thus far been conservative, suggest significantly (30%+) improvements in the immediate (5yr) pipeline. Neglecting some of the finer details it is the cheapest equipment under most scenarios. I suspect rather draconian government intervention will allow some type of "free" market compromise to prevent the eradication of existing models.

    2. Re:One last thing by ka9dgx · · Score: 1

      So you are arguing against widely distributed small generators on that basis? They provide LOCALIZATION OF PRODUCTION by their very nature, so I suggest you be a bit more honest about your reason for objecting to them.

      As nuclear is far more reliable

      If there were thousands of little generating plants, we wouldn't need a big heavy duty grid... but solar is not a generating plant. It is a sometimes available source of energy which perturbs the balance of the grid over the time frame of seconds.

      The Grid is a system designed to reliably deliver power from a set of fairly reliable constant power sources. Those sources were designed to go online and stay at design load for many months at a crack, then have a scheduled maintenance outage. and then do it again. There are stresses associated with each transition, which are cumulative, and result in finite lifespans for things like generator shafts.

      Yes... a generator shaft is a big dumb piece of steel... until you start to think about it and dig deeper. It was probably cast in a spinning mold with a vacuum applied to cause any defects to be located in the center of the shaft. Those defects are then bored out, and thus you have a nice, strong, reliable piece of steel good for 5 decades of service, with a huge margin of safety. This huge margin considered 12 outages and/or unit trips per year, a safety factor of probably 20 for good measure, and an outrageous 50 year service life.

      Since the 1950s... plants now cycle far more often thanks to big cheap nukes.... cutting that margin way back. Now you want to cycle them every time a cloud passes through the neighborhood of a large solar installation? They won't last 5 years at that rate.

      The stresses on the whole grid from crappy politically special flowers will eventually collapse the grid unless some heavy, HEAVY upgrades are done... which just ain't gonna happen.

      Solar/Wind is going to kill the grid... just wait and see.

    3. Re:One last thing by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It is a sometimes available source of energy which perturbs the balance of the grid over the time frame of seconds.

      Bell Labs came up with an answer to that in 1947.
      I really don't know where this "perturbs the balance of the grid" bullshit is coming from on a site that supposed to have a basis on something other than magical thinking.

    4. Re:One last thing by wienerschnizzel · · Score: 1

      So you are arguing against widely distributed small generators on that basis? They provide LOCALIZATION OF PRODUCTION by their very nature

      Only if they do it reliably. Your LOCALIZED (to honor your all caps notation) power generators are worthless for this argument if they stop providing power at random times and you have to rely on the distant ones anyway.

      Also, you cannot build large and solar farms in any LOCATION. The south-west part of Germany in this case is mountainous but still quite densely populated. Meaning - not particularly windy and not many free places for solar panels. That's why the wind farms are in the north - the land is flat and sparsely populated (though distant).

    5. Re:One last thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fairy tales

      predicated on technologies that don't exist, and probably wont come to pass!

    6. Re:One last thing by radl33t · · Score: 1

      cheap PV is predicated on current prices available to consumers.

      cheap batteries are extrapolated from historical data, the technology pipeline, and simple learning cost models. given the track record on related technologies, i wouldn't bet against manufacturers' ability to make things cheaply.

      of course until we hit these cost points, your opinion remains valid. what bets against economies of scale have you previously won?

  63. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >same thing with the electrical car that could run on water

    Bull fucking shit. There isn't a government conspiracy hiding free energy because it's impossible.

  64. Firefighting residential structures with PV panels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am a volunteer firefighter, FF1 Interior, for a rural NY fire district in Saint Lawrence County. I have responded to about 10 structure fires since I signed up. None of those structures had PV panels.

    The NFPA has published a report "Fire Fighter Safety and Emergency Response for Solar Power Systems" (google for it) that details some of the extra risks involved with PV installations.

    That report indicates that roof mounted PV panel risks include: tripping or slipping hazards (e.g. during vertical ventilation), structual collapse due to extra weight, increased flame spread, inhalation exposure (chemical breakdown of panels), electrical shock and battery hazards (confined space, explosion, etc).

    When working a structure fire we always assume that all wires are energized. Our department policy disallows 'pulling the meter' to disconnect line power from the structure. In our area the power provider (National Grid) has tremendously downsized their staff so much that calls for power disconnects often take more than 60 minutes for a response. This means we're usually fighting fires in structures with live wires.

    We do try to disconnect the main breaker if it is safe to reach, but that's usually a low priority task that comes after initial attack.

    We haven't had a chance to train or drill on PV safety. I think I'll bring this up with our training officer.

  65. Dont worry, they will find a way to outlaw it by bobjr94 · · Score: 1

    Local governments (under pressure their utilities) will pass some 'neighborhood improvement act'. It will say something like to prevent eyesores solar and wind installs must not be visible, need special permits, will be taxed to prevent their users from getting power at a lower rate than everyone else. Just like how some states have extra tax on hybrid and EV vehicles, because they dont pay their fair share of fuel taxes.

  66. Peak power generation by dbIII · · Score: 1

    The thing about peak power sources is they are used when the demand is higher than the base load can provide. You don't use them all the time. Now do you understand how it is possible that you can get a zero in wind produced energy when the wind is blowing? It's not that there is no wind, it's that there is no need to bring the windmills online.
    So I'm not arguing against real numbers, I'm pointing out what they actually signify.
    Please consider that and look at the page again, perhaps mentally adding in the conventional chart to get a chart for total consumption. Take note that the axis on one chart is three times that of another. Do you see that now - it's just filling in the peaks.


    I think in general people here are not grasping the concept that windmills are very small generating units that are brought online as required instead of connected 24/7/365 like large thermal generators.

    1. Re:Peak power generation by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Wind power in Germany is not turned on and off to accommodate peaking, and to imply that it is either simple ignorance or a intentionally false. Wind is generating at full available power all the time, it is coal, gas, and biomass that are manged to fill in the peaks. Sorry if that reality doesn't fit your curve.

  67. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Taxes are like drugs, once you're hooked - it's very hard to get off, like addicts...politicians will find a way to make you pay either way."

    Taxes aren't needed to fund the government. The government can get zero cost funding through the Fed, which expands its balance sheet, and returns interest profits to the Treasury each year. Index everything (bank accounts, transfer payments, everything) to inflation as Israel has successfully for decades, so purchasing power does not decrease.

  68. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because you'll still pay a monthly fee to have a wire hooked up even if you're not using it. utilities here are trying to fuck the poor by raising the monthly fee and lowering the usage fee.

  69. Re:Electric rates going up 37% in Massachusetts no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With a 37% price hike I'd call them up and tell them to shut me off. Solar panels are so cheap now it's a no-brainer. Storage is the problem, of course, but once you've got a big battery on wheels sitting unused most of the time (electric car) that is a simple solution.

  70. That's why they are trying ban them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WeEnergies is trying to raise rates while banning leasing of solar panels.

  71. They Will Fight Back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As reported in the NY Times, energy companies will fight back using bought and paid for state legislatures.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/27/opinion/sunday/the-koch-attack-on-solar-energy.html

  72. Canadian Power is Absurd by Etherwalk · · Score: 1

    True for definitions of 'not exact' that equal 'fantasy pulled from a dark stinky place'.

    A $6000 solar system produces $10000 per year? In Canada? Fucking idiot AC! Don't post again.

    Canada is paying ridiculously large subsidies to solar operations, something like $0.88/KWh/yr, if I remember correctly. Meanwhile their actual power rates are very high and, in Ontario at least, are incredibly poorly managed (e.g. not sending a bill for eight months because they can't run their own electronic billing systems properly, making all kinds of manual changes to all of the bills, and paying a fortune on the Utility's debt service from another instance of gross mismanagement years ago.)

  73. Really? That much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone's using an excavator to shovel the bullshit around to keep the Narrative alive.

    1) PV solar is pretty much so-so on overall performance. Those "super efficient" thin film and similar cells that Solyndra and Abound Solar were going to change the game with? 18% Peak is 44% with cells that're too expensive to make and aren't too terribly reliable.

    2) The cells used on rooftops are in that 18% range.

    3) They only produce truthfully usable power in mostly sunny to sunny conditions.

    4) The pollution produced to MAKE the things outpaces any and all realistic emissions of the technology they're "replacing"- and it's nastier stuff. Cadmium. Tellurium. They make CO2 look like the choir boy.

    Quite simply put, this is a collective delusion that those on the Left want us spinning our wheels on. PV solar's only usable in a handful of contexts, and none of them are the ones people are all going gung-ho to put it into service for. It's useful where it's impractical or dangerous to bring mains power into an area that you have a good high level of sunlight in. It's useful when you're backpacking to power up some devices. That sort of thing. Not this BS. And if you think the power companies are quaking in their boots...heh...they're laughing their asses off at all of the fools off doing this.

  74. Blowback for Enron etc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heh... If you think it was all about that, you'd be mistaken. It's also worth noting that they're not even worried- this is a supposition that they SHOULD be worried with pie-in-the-sky delusions about how much the people playing at producing power are going to cut into their profits.

    Come back and tell me this when there's realistically something that will eat into as much as 40% of their profits. Something like a home 10-40kW Thorium reactor unit would be in that ballpark. Something that peels 10-40kW of juice out of the Casimir force in a single unit the size of a fridge or smaller would be another example thereof. Solar power's not it except for a small range of situations.

  75. moron "journalist" by supernova87a · · Score: 1

    Can we stop quoting articles by Computerworld's idiot writer, Lucas Mearian, and rewarding such a shitty journalist with more airtime?

    Gems like this shouldn't be allowed to see the light of day: "For the SW Utility, the all in average retail rate at 10% PV penetration is 23 cents/kWh (1.8%) higher over the first 10 years of the analysis period (i.e., from 2013 to 2022) than it is without PV."

    $0.23 is the rate, not the difference in rate. For fuck's sake.

    This is the same "journalist" that just the other day was posted here, talking about "The system is capable of producing up to 1,600 cubic liters of water per day"... http://hardware.slashdot.org/s...

  76. WHACKO MATH ERROR by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 2

    Canada has winter for 7 months of the year or more. Snow covers PV panels. So does frost. Shorter daylight hours occur just as demand peaks due to heating demand. We also have cloudy days, rainy days, foggy days.

    And how does this work for tenants in apartment buildings? Or co-op owners in a high-rise? Roof space per occupant is a lot lower.

    YET NOT ONE OF THE TOP 3 PARTIES WANTS THIS FOR ITS PEOPLE

    AND yes the math is not exact here this is a quick example, now imagine the usa and germany doing this

    Of course none of the parties want this - your numbers don't add up, and you ignore the reality that the backup storage costs and days/weeks/months when power can't be generated render this scheme really stupid, eh?

    --
    "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  77. Interesting and challenging, thanks by Bruce66423 · · Score: 1

    I guess the question that springs to mind is whether that covers ALL network costs, including the high voltage lines from the power station to the sub station. I'm also wondering whether the rural nature of your area doesn't provide a degree of latency and resilience that may be more absent in an urban environment. But I'm guessing there. But yes, you do make an interesting point; thanks.

    I guess the other question about costings is about baseload; the issues are spelt out here:

    http://www.economist.com/news/...

    not quite sure how that translates to the western side of the Pond.

    1. Re:Interesting and challenging, thanks by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      I guess the question that springs to mind is whether that covers ALL network costs, including the high voltage lines from the power station to the sub station.

      It covers the ongoing maintenance of those lines. Installation of those lines was paid for by a bond issue, many years ago, and I don't actually recall if servicing that debt was included in the infrastructure fee or rolled into the usage payment.

  78. Error:There was a missing or invalid parameter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What this study is not taking into account is the upcoming doubling of residential electricity demand. As we transition from ICE vehicles to electric vehicles over the next decade or so, residential electricity usage will increase dramatically. Rooftop solar, if indeed it does become as popular as they're predicting, will only offset the additional usage. Further, residential electricity usage is only a small fraction of overall electricity usage, will is likely to also continue to increase. No, the utility companies have nothing to fear.

  79. It is time to stop the protectionism practices ! by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1

    Because of protectionism cheap solar panels have been taxed until they become so much more expensive by the time they got to the consumers

    A calculation I read somewhere - sorry, I lost the link - that if there was none of those stupid taxes the solar panels could have been gotten for almost _half_ of the current prices

    Can you imagine the impact of consumers getting _twice_ as many solar panels installed on their roofs?

    Can you imagine how much more clean power that gonna generate ... and how many more gigatons of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses that didn't have to be spewed into the atmosphere because of the clean power generated by those extra solar panels?

    If we truly want to save the planet earth, we must insist that all the stupid protectionism practices be stopped !!

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  80. Re: It is time to stop the protectionism practices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What!? Taxes making solar panels more expensive? I don't know where you live but in my state, Illinois, they actually pay people via tax credits to put solar panles on their houses.

  81. Solar only works because of *HUGE* subsidies by knorthern+knight · · Score: 1

    See http://www.carbon49.com/2010/0... for some details of of how everybody else is being ripped off to make solar "profitable" in the pronce of Ontario in Canada...

    > Ontario Hydro One will buy the clean energy generated from the program
    > participants at rates of up to 80 cents/kWh. This is much higher than the
    > rates Ontario Hydro One sell their energy to the public at approximately
    > 9 cents/kWh. The idea is to provide financial incentives for private
    > businesses and communities to invest in renewable energy generation

    Yes, that's right. The provincial power utility is paying almost 9 times as much for unreliable solar (and wind) power as it charges the public. Damn well right it's a money-loser. This works like something invented by the "creative accounting" minds at Enron. Imagine 3 neighbours living next door to each other....

    Neighbour A) pays 9.3 cents per KWH for his usage

    Neighbour B) generates 12% of his usage, and feeds it to his fridge/computers/swimming-pool/whatever. He only has to pay for the remaining 88% of his usage

    Neighbour C) generates 12% of his usage and sells it to Ontario Hydro at the super-inflated rate. He then buys back 100% of his usage at the regular retail rate. He effectively pays zero for his electricity, even though he only generates 12% of what he's using.

    This is legislated robbery.

    --

    I'm not repeating myself
    I'm an X window user; I'm an ex-Windows user
  82. Solar power only viable in certain areas, though. by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

    Despite what some supporters think, solar power in order to be really viable have to be located in parts of the world where there are a lot of sunny days. For example, the southwestern USA has some of the best daylight conditions in the world for solar power--and the same can be said for southern Europe. Indeed, the country of Greece should have rooftop solar power everywhere, given the number of sunny days in that part of the world.

    Here in California, rooftop solar power has really taken off because there are enough sunny days to justify the cost of installation. Imagine generating 15 to 30 kW of power during daytime--more than enough to run a single-family home, including air conditioning.

  83. ash by bunbuntheminilop · · Score: 1

    I'll invest in the now lucrative broom market and make a fortune.

  84. Help me please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please help me cut my profits from 8% to 41%!

  85. I thought that a simple solution.. Roofs45 degrees by PDX · · Score: 1

    Requiring new city construction where feasible orienting the rooftops to a East to West run with a 45 degree slope. This wouldn't require building PV panels onto the building during construction. It could be added on later by the owner. Having the option of generating part of your own power needs should be a factor for large apartment complexes receiving a permit. Having roofs oriented north to south severely limits power generation.

  86. Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Wind is generating at full available power all the time

    While it is a wind power suppliers wet dream and some rent seekers are pushing for such a thing it is not reality. WTF did you get such bullshit from? It's a peak source, and wishful thinking is not going to make distributors treat it as anything else.
    Once again - that weather chart - you'll find those periods of zero wind generation do not match periods where there was magically a calm over an entire country but instead match when electricity consumption could be supplied entirely by base load. You cannot manage a large coal fired or other thermal unit for wildly variable load and the time taken to fire them up is hours or days - that's the reality, base load is run as base load.. You don't keep a lot of thermal power units running as spinning reserve either, they still need to consume fuel when operated that way.
    It appears that you have a major assumption here that is frankly utter bullshit. I'm not blaming you for it sticking, but who threw it in your direction?

    1. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but you are just wrong. Germany is maximizing their wind generation because that is how they justify the cost of building the wind, and show they are reaching their goals of % renewables. If your claims were correct, they would not have the short overcapacity periods because they would just shut down wind. But that is not happening. Your assumption is based completely on your interpretation of some weather chart, but weather charts only show averages, not the true transmittance of wind. Gusting winds are much different than steady winds, etc. If you want to continue your assertion, please find a credible source that describes this operational mode being used in Germany.

    2. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      http://www.ise.fraunhofer.de/e...

      Slides 35-38 clearly demonstrate my point and show that conventional sources are used to offset the intermittent of wind and solar. No sane operator would choose to ramp conventional up and down that much for any other reason, the reason is offset and it is obvious from looking at those pages. It is also clear that there would be no benefit from shutting down wind generation for peak management, as it is quite clear conventional is quite capable (as it was before renewables were added). You contended conventional source could not follow demand in that manner, but clearly that assumption was wrong and is quite ill though out since many countries manage their peaks quite fine without renewables. I am sure you will simply choose not to believe, and rationalize some other reason for the great variability in conventional generation, rather than accept what is quite obvious.

    3. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      And before you try to make up more stuff

      http://www.ise.fraunhofer.de/e...

      Look at slide 78. If your contention were true there would be a correlation between Wind generation and peak, but there is clearly no correlation. The correlation is with conventional. There are periods of low demand with high wind output, and period of high demand with low wind output. So, you'll have to explain that. I'm sure you'll try to get creative.

      What was your source for your contention? I certainly backed up my point with real data.

    4. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I suggest you look at it again from a credible source before making such wild claims that the graphs you supplied do not support.
      Periods of zero generation do not fit with your description and it's a pretty stupid idea anyway to try to fill in on the peak sources since the base load generation is very difficult to change other than in very large steps.

    5. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      What was your source for your contention?

      With respect I'm not the one making the wild counterintuitive claims. Your suggestion of mandatory use of wind makes no sense at all when the majority of the generating capacity is base load that is very difficult to vary. In reality the small wind units are put on or offline as required.
      As for the graph, look it again and notice when the periods of maximum contribution from wind are. It's almost always at times of peak power consumption. It's not almost continuous as it would be if your assertion above was correct.
      It's a pity the graph lumps in peaking gas turbines as "conventional" or the base load would be a bit more obvious.

    6. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      More complete bullshit from someone who's been caught and cornered. You can see the changes in conventional generation right there on the chart that you claim can't be done. Nothing you said so far is backed up by one single document. I'm sorry, but you are simply laughable at this point, and any who looks at those charts can easily see, so I know you'll reply with more bullshit and no backup, I've closed this matter for anyone who has read the thread. Got yard work to do... go ahead and reply with more unfounded bullshit. At this point, you'll just make yourself look more foolish.

    7. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      As for the graph, look it again and notice when the periods of maximum contribution from wind are. It's almost always at times of peak power consumption.

      FALSE

    8. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I didn't realise you were playing a game here. I thought you had some interest in the topic instead of getting me "caught and cornered" by some arbitrary rules.
      I suggest at a moment when you are not playing games that you take a look at those graphs again and keep what I wrote above in mind. Reply, or not, once you have considered it instead of some knee jerk "I got ya" just because I suggested that you apply some thought to the subject and can see for yourself if you try.

    9. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Page 78

    10. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      All the charts back up my point, including page 78.

    11. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Not as such. Please treat this seriously and not as some sort of game where you disparage things that are outside of your field of expertise.

    12. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Here's the thing. I have showed you the charts that clearly, without any doubt, show that wind power peaking does not correlate with load peaking, as you suggested. The same charts also clearly show that conventional generation correlates with peaking, which you suggested was not true. I don't know what else I should say if you are just going to ignore the facts that are clear and unambiguous. Moreover, your contention that conventional sources are not used for peaking defies any reasonable measure of common sense since we've done it fine for the last century without wind power.

      If you want to continue a serious conversation, and earn back any respect, you need to first face the reality of the information I presented, and admit your contentions are erroneous.

      And, just to throw you a bone, theoretically you could build enough wind power so that all loads are powered even in periods of low wind. Of course, there would be huge overcapacity and an large amount of unused turbines for much of the time, costs to build would be tremendous, and the transmission infrastructure would need a big overhaul. Fact is, nobody is heading that direction. I don't care to discuss this, but if you want to be a proponent of such a solution please do the math on cost.

      Until you can stand up like a man and admit the facts that are obvious from those charts, how do you expect me to take on a serious conversation with you?

      I'll state it again. Wind power in Germany is run as much as possible, that is, when the wind is blowing, the turbines are generating. Wind turbines are not dispatched on and off for peaking. Wind and solar have production priority and other sources are reduced when there is over capacity, other sources come on line when there is under capacity. There may be very rare cases were some turbines need to be cut off, but it is not part of peak load following management. Any contention otherwise is false, uninformed, and makes zero practical sense. The wind output variability shown is a good reflection of the overall wind energy availability over time in Germany.

    13. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I'll state it again. Wind power in Germany is run as much as possible

      That is not a correct statement and waving a few graphs around that do not prove it one way or another does not make it correct.

    14. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Actually, it is very true and even required by law. (Renewable Energy Sources Act – EEG)

      http://instituteforenergyresea...

      "Because German energy laws stipulate that “green” power must always have priority on the grid, control centers cannot take wind farms off the grid when too much electricity is being generated. System operators also try to avoid shutting down their coal, gas and nuclear facilities because they rely on these power plants to produce a consistent level of baseload power at all times. "

      And here; http://thinkprogress.org/clima...

      "Renewable electricity has priority on the German grid and therefore offsets conventional "

      And many other places, its easy to verify if you even try. The fact is, you cannot find a single source that back up your contention, and the reason you can't is because you just made it up. If not, show me a single source. Just one. I can guarantee you do not have it.

    15. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The same charts also clearly show that conventional generation correlates with peaking

      Sorry to jump in the middle of the thread, but you'll find that bit is the gas turbines and other "traditional" small generators that used to be the only option at times of peak power consumption. Now there's also other stuff in that niche.

    16. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1



      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    17. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany

      I don't care about it - I'm merely trying to point out that it depends on so many things that it cannot be used as evidence to justify some strange idea about there being a dead calm from Gibraltar to Istanbul.

      Cite your sources

      Any continental weather map showing pressure or wind speeds.

    18. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Anyone reading this thread can clearly tell you are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    19. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Calm down. Either point out the above statement is incorrect or take it at face value - I'm trying to make things clearer with that comment instead of provoking you.
      As for source with gas turbines - I've seen the things and you probably have too.

    20. Re:Not reality - so where did your idea come from? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      I can't have a reasonable converstion with a bullshitter? You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

  87. So it's strawman attack now by dbIII · · Score: 1
    You are overstating implications and now attacking my qualifications because I don't subscribe to your doomsday scenario? Cute.

    yet you appear to be utterly ignorant of the very basics of realities of electricity production and electric grids

    However since I've had the boots on that ground and you have not then where is the misunderstanding likely to be? Give up on the petty bullying in the hope that I have low self esteem. I brought up that background simply to indicate that I can tell the difference between your silly nuclear fanboy propaganda and reality.

    because you can't keep the AC frequency in proper phase

    A lot of work has gone into making sure that such things do not have to bother you in your armchair and it works better with solar, wind, gas turbines and other peak power sources than without.

    1. Re:So it's strawman attack now by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Doomsday scenario? Rolling blackouts forced by overload on portion of grid is a norm even in some Western countries. Complete blackouts are far from unheard of. If you were ever an engineer working with electric grids, you'd be well aware of this fact.

      Not going to even bother with the rest. You didn't even understand what I referred to when talking about what happens when you lose a power source and how that pushes your transit network out of phase with the rest of power generators. You just spouted general knowledge on how things work normally.

    2. Re:So it's strawman attack now by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Rolling blackouts forced by overload on portion of grid is a norm even in some Western countries.

      Uncommon, and even then your transformers on fire thing is a bit of a joke.

      You didn't even understand what I referred to when talking about what happens when you lose a power source and how that pushes your transit network out of phase with the rest of power generators.

      I understand it's not a big deal, file it with your transformers on fire. Units drop off power networks on many occasions and there are simple procedures to deal with it instead of panic and doomsday scenarios.

      You've been caught out with your bullshit above and shown to know so little about it that I can use examples that a high schooler can understand, yet it seems I just cannot dumb it down enough. This pretending to be dumb for the sake of attacking an alternative energy that you see as a challenge to your own favourite alternative energy is far beneath you.

    3. Re:So it's strawman attack now by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Right. Dumb it down. You didn't even know anything beyond the very basic, did not understand the slightly more advanced concept at all, do not even know that rolling blackouts are a common thing to manage grid supply failures in Western countries, like Canada in 2014 and 2012 and so on.

      And then you "call my bullshit". Right.

  88. Not a point source - distributed by dbIII · · Score: 1

    It is a sometimes available source of energy which perturbs the balance of the grid over the time frame of seconds.

    Oh yes, that thick cloud extending from Los Angeles to New York that we never saw coming. Distributed power sources increase grid stability instead of what you are suggesting.

  89. I should have put this in the other post by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Do not not grasp the concept of very rapidly disconnecting a power source in the event of overload? Your comment about seems to imply that you don't think something so fundamental was thought of and designed for back in Edison's day.

    1. Re:I should have put this in the other post by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      No, I merely point out that you don't have a faintest clue of modus operandi of a grid operator, and the factors involved, as you guessed them completely incorrectly.

      Which is something that any electric engineer that has ever worked on power supply systems would know, because they have to work with automation systems that have processes to counteract those factors.

    2. Re:I should have put this in the other post by dbIII · · Score: 1

      How would you know?
      You've been spouting the equivalent of calling the beige box under the desk "the hard drive" after all.

  90. Very true by macpacheco · · Score: 1

    One must look at solar rooftop not as an isolated technology but coupled with energy storage.
    Even today its already economical to use rooftop solar + storage to avoid demand charges slapped on commercial customers that follow the demand increase in peak hours (like residential customers). It doesn't mean being energy independent at peak demand hours, but rather just flattening out a business energy demand curve.
    Of course it starts with having rooftop PV.
    Li-Ion battery cells are slated to drop significantly in price until 2020 due to Tesla's Giga factory.
    At that point it will be economical to be energy independent in the 3-5 hours after sunset.
    In the winter, energy storage will be used to buy the cheapest electricity (midnight-6AM), and use it when energy costs the most during the day.
    If energy storage prices drop enough, many consumers will use energy storage to flatten out their demand, which would help increase baseload production demand (by buying more electricity in low demand hours).
    But still, long term trend is shifting low demand hours to daylight hours, with storage consumers will be able to adjust and adapt.

  91. On the other hand... by also+aswell · · Score: 1

    When todays outmoded segments of the power grid cause brownouts during peak service hours, rooftop panels help relieve the problem and save the power companies lots of money...

    --
    "Where did this apple come from?"
    --Alan Turing
  92. Capital Investment vs ROI by servant · · Score: 1
    Utilities should be able to take advantage of economies of scale to overcome the desire for distributed 'self generated' power. If not, they too will go the way of the Buggy Whip manufacturer that was part of the Dow-Jones average a century ago. (FYI: only 11 of the 30 stocks in the DJIA make durable goods)

    .

    From what I have seen, the power companies are doing their best to keep down the move to self generated power, except for keeping their cost to the customer lower than what the customer can generate it themselves. Even doing their best to have private generation taxed by governments (that want the revenue) rather than become more efficient and reliable. They are also clinging to old technologies for generation rather than trying to address better, safer, greener, sources.

    They seem to be fighting becoming a common carrier and accepting power from 'anyone' and reselling it (with a reasonable markup for selling and accepting generation capacity).

    The more we can become self powered, without the need for the 'power company' the better off we all are. It is a protection against inflation and 'grid fault' power outages. The companies don't need (or apparently want) to expand capacity with better / cleaner technologies. Once installed solar can be close to zero impact. (Using lead acid batteries for storage need replacing in about 5 years. NiFe batteries cost about 3x as much, but never must be replaced (people are still using some Thomas Edison made about a century ago - no, that is real - they were used by utilities for peaking, farms for storing self generated power (from windmills), in train switch engines, even in trucks. The Baker Electric sold it in their cars close to 1900 for an extra fee.).

    I am not against wind power, but it doesn't work easily 'everywhere'. Hydroelectric even micro-hydro generators are great, but more dams are being removed than being built due to environmental concerns. The Power Towers and wind generators both seem to have issues with causing problems with migrating birds (killing them, or near the power towers they 'flame out' when flying through the concentrated solar beam they are attracted to. Nuclear fusion isn't near being production ready, and fission using radium based technology has problems with massive amounts of long term 'hot waste' that we have not found how to recycle or re-use, or even store in inactive storage, so most stays in storage pools near the reactors where it was used. (Thorium based 'LFTR' reactors show promise, but it appears that China and India will have working ones before we do. In the '60s we turned off for the last time the only Thorium reactor we had in use (safely) at Oak Ridge National Labs in TN. - And these reactors CAN consume plutonium and some of the uranium waste as PART of its fuel stream, reducing need for other fuels and getting rid of what is otherwise waste. We currently have no active program in the US. Canada is moving ahead, but still India and China will beat them to market given current trajectories.)

    --
    ... "When you pry the source from my cold dead hands."
  93. not gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Red states are gonna tax the solar power users, and provide corporate welfare for the utilities.

    Blue states are gonna just roll over and let them raise rates to make up the difference.

    Since most states are a mix the reality will be both corporate welfare and increased rates.

  94. 100+year electric system is going to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A safe prediction that in 8 years the system will change.

    Not a safe prediction as to what the electric system will look like in 8 years, everything is changing.

    IF you are concerned with the pollution you are contributing perhaps you should consider reducing your current electric and heating energy use by 70% or so using existing off-the -shelf equipment.

    With TAX credits of 30% from the Federal government and (in some states like Iowa) 18% additional tax credit, a nominal system composed of solar and heat panels, AC and FA controllers, LED lights, auto-thermostats, hot water controller, amp reduction for compressor, motors, fans, etc. you can knock down a $15,000 (average 1,400 to 2,000 sq ft home) retail investment to $7,800.

    Average US homes eat $2,500/yr heat and electric. Reduce energy costs 70% ................ from $2,500/yr to $750/yr
    or
    $2,500 = $208.33 a month down to $750/yr reduced to $62.50/mo

    It would take 4.6 years to pay $7,800 (at $1,750/yr reduction)

    Is it a good investment? Absolutely

    Where else today can you get 22% from a $ 7,800 investment that pays you as long as you live in your home and increases as rates climb?

    or you could wait 10 more years before YOU do anything ................. but talk about it.

    COST OF WAITING: $1,750 X 10 = $17,500 - $7,800 investment = lost opportunity cost you $9,700....while you were contributing pollution.

    What could go wrong:
    No TAX credit
    In the wrong location to get benefit from solar
    no job, no money, no home....
    volcanoes erupt reducing solar energy globally
    democrats win the house
    isis invades your neighborhood
    world-wide sewers back up
    America in depression and electricity at .01/kilowatt hr.
    EMP attack
    republicans win the senate
    Beetlebaum wins the Preakness

    It is possible
    It is cost effective
    It makes you money
    it reduces pollution

    Speculation about what will happen in 8 years gets you nowhere.

    jjvon

  95. 100+year electric system is going to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but who want to do anything

  96. Re:The industry will NEVER allow you free energy.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    problem is you don't really want to take yourself off the grid, you want to have your cake and eat it.

    You want to use solar/wind shit to lower your bills, but when the sun goes down/wind stops, you want to pull from the grid like a battery, and have the rest of us pay you for the privilege.

    Take yourself completely off the grid and pay for the problems your fucking self.

    You can deal with having a shit load of toxic chemicals in batteries (put them in your cellar, then you live on a large bomb! toxic/explosive gasses), and pay for the expensive dumping when they die.

    Don't any of you fuck wits understand the engineering problems of dealing with large amount of energy?

  97. Now that is a very blatant lie by dbIII · · Score: 1

    "wind power generation is reduced at peak times to compensate"

    WTF?
    You've really hit the bottom of the barrel when you are putting words in my mouth and pretending they are a quote. You've really let down whoever educated and trained you with such behaviour. What a disgusting little political animal you are.

  98. Now I see where it comes from by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Interesting opinion from a "think tank" run by economists at best but I don't see where it cites an actual law - although it does cite a few newspaper articles! That's high school homework stuff. I suggest you attempt to find evidence of such a thing and then perhaps you'll understand the issue in greater depth, most likely in greater depth than a "think tank" without a single technically oriented person listed on their page!
    Even if such a law actually does exist, which I doubt even if rent seekers with windmills are pushing hard for it, wind has a lot of downtime for maintanance so is rarely fully utilised anyway.


    This discussion is really about wind blowing or not anyway. Imagined patterns in graphs from a portion of a continental grid which may have a policy promoting the use of wind really do not address the core issue of there always being some wind somewhere in a large enough distributed network. I'm not a big fan of wind power but it does have a place in an energy mix. Monocultures suck in generation. You end up one drought, miners strike or major transport blockage incident away from blackouts.

    1. Re:Now I see where it comes from by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Are you really now saying that the energy act is not law? You can simply look it up. You are IGNORANT, and intentionally so. The law requires the use of ALL AVAILABLE WIND AND SOLAR, ALL THE TIME. JUST FUCKING READ IT AND ADMIT YOU FABRICATED THE IDEA THAT WIND IS TURNED ON AND OFF FOR PEAKING! You made it up, and you wont' admit it. Why won't you admit it? I can guess.

      http://www.bmub.bund.de/filead...
      http://www.bakermckenzie.com/f...

      Grid operators must, immediately and as a priority, purchase, transmit and distribute the entire available quantity of electricity from a renewable energy installation (Section 8 EEG).

      Germany has enough wind turbines built that the total generation charts show a good representation of the wind generation profile across the country. But, you have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have this discussion until you admit you fabricated the contention that wind is turned on and off for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your source or admit it.

    2. Re:Now I see where it comes from by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Please quote the relevant portion instead of link spam - the previous thing was like a high school project based on newspaper clippings and I'm sure you could do far better yourself than that bunch. Also please consider my second paragraph above.

      But, you have already proven you ignore facts

      Not established as facts from what you've quoted so far, and I very strongly dispute your interpretation of that graph above. There's no continuous band depicting a preference for wind at all - it's even zero in places.

    3. Re:Now I see where it comes from by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      dbIII, you are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts that clearly show no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the chart that have high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also showed how convetional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ingore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have show you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts becuase you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

  99. Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by dbIII · · Score: 1
    That act says "priority" which is obviously not all capacity isn't it? While I disagree that even that should be mandated it does not state that all available wind generation capacity should be used at all times which is the line you've been taking.

    Cite your source

    Since I've only been asserting that the wind is always blowing somewhere, the daily weather map in your newspaper will do or on television. For the rest I've been asking you to justify your own statements and attempting to explain very simple things about distributed power networks and a variety of different types of generators.

    1. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      dbIII, you are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    2. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany

      You have asserted that you can see patterns in a graph depicting a portion of the European grid and suggest those depict the wind over the entire grid better than a primary source such as a weather map showing wind speeds or pressures. That is not showing "actual data". That is a theatrical prop to show while expressing an opinion.

    3. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Why should I converse with a bullshitter? You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    4. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      So? It's true in comparison to thermal power and photovoltaics. You are interested in the topic so I'm telling you stuff and also part of the reason why I wrote way above "I've never had anything to do with windmills and don't even like them much". Way above I was kicking back against an idiot "ends justifies the means" nuke fanboy on the attack on another alternative energy - you just decided to jump and and get caught in the backwash of his ridiculous lie.
      Like windmills or not they are mainstream things now because they have a niche where they can be useful. The Chinese are not "green" yet they have a lot of the things.

    5. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Why can't you be honest and admit you are a bullshitter? You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    6. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Did you even read that post above? Calm down and think about the topic instead of getting angry because I remind you of some political baggage or something. You want to know about wind power - I'm telling you a few things about it instead of disparaging it or advocating it.

    7. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      One can't have a productive conversation with a proven bullshitter. You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    8. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You then said it might not be actual law

      I did not write that. That law just does not the implications that you, and it appears Luckyo way above, suggest it does. It's a priority queue for scraps and not about bringing 5GW offline to let wind have a go.

    9. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Not only a bullshitter, but clear case of willfull ignorance. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    10. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Cite your sources

      http://en.windfinder.com/weather-maps/report/germany#5/51.179/10.459

    11. Re:Ten pages in - why didn't you just quote? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      That is stupid, its just a weather wind map. No talk of peak loading of wind power. No backup of any of your points. Only an idiot just post that with no explanation on why its even relevant. But, that's what bullshitters do.

      You accused me of making stuff up, and not knowing what I was talking about, but it is you that is a proven bullshitter!. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

  100. It's a queue for the scraps by dbIII · · Score: 1

    I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power

    Without base load, typically sold in 1GW+ chunks, you have nothing. That law appears to be a priority queue for the scraps.
    I wish you would have actually quoted the bit that supposedly proves something you are asserting and saved me the time.

    All the wind all the time - what rubbish - it's not implemented and it would be stupid if it was.

    1. Re:It's a queue for the scraps by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Do you really like being a proven bullshitter? Its your own fault. You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    2. Re:It's a queue for the scraps by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I've been fairly civil with you despite your pushing so many things that do not refute my statement that the wind is always blowing somewhere so what's the big deal here?
      I see odd points on that graph but no trend - and besides it's a portion of the European grid and my statement above was clearly about dealing with large grids and not point sources.

  101. Here is why - point from above - get it now? by dbIII · · Score: 1
    You appear to have forgotten the post you jumped on in an attempt to disprove:

    "The thing with wind, as any child who watches the TV weather knows, is that it is always blowing somewhere. It's never calm on the whole planet or even an entire country bigger than Monaco. Windmills are not just in one spot but spread around countries especially now that they've been adopted by electricity generators for a few years - thus there's always at least some wind power available when you want to bring a few more MW online. They may cost a shitload per MW but for when you just want a little bit more power that's a lot cheaper than warming up 500MW worth of coal, which comes in big packages or not at all."

    Get it now?
    Your trying to relate secondary information from graphs that depend on several different conditions to whether there is wind or not is inferior to just seeing if the wind is blowing or not. Detours into misinterpretations of laws about priority of minor contributors to the grid were a bit strange - your angry reaction to being informed about the existence of gas turbines as conventional peak generation sources disturbing.
    This has been a rather odd experience but has given me a bit of an insight into situations where politics is seen to trump reality.

    1. Re:Here is why - point from above - get it now? by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Wow, you are really ignorant, trying to use a previous post as a source. WTF? Then, repeating your willful ignorance.

      You a proven bullshitter!. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    2. Re:Here is why - point from above - get it now? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It's not a source - it's what you replied to with your various sidetracks into other issues.
      The depressing thing is that it has been long enough that you could have read enough to understand the factors behind the graph you used as a prop but have not chosen to do so. The other depressing thing is the feigned mental illness of the cut and paste repetitive post - come on now, you are not actually sane and older than two years old so you know better than to use silly tantrums to get what you want.

  102. Typo by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Meant to be "not actually insane". I've been giving you the benefit of the doubt on so many things so long despite such a juvenile method of feigned mental illness to attack instead of discuss.

    1. Re:Typo by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      You may be right, I may be crazy.

      But you a proven bullshitter!. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

  103. And yet it moves by dbIII · · Score: 1

    You don't have such an excuse for tilting at windmills. You are merely a well behaved sheep willing to deny reality for The Party like a good little useful idiot for Stalin. Truly pathetic, but you've certainly kept me feeling smug and superior for a few days now, so it was worth remaining polite. Did you really think your cut and paste tantrums would have any other effect other than to make others think you are worthless?
    "And yet it moves" is a good little quote to apply to your silly idea that the wind stops on a continent wide basis. Blind ideology does not trump reality and only provides the illusion of doing so when authoritarian politics is in play. This is supposed to be a technical site and not a wacko politics site that goes so far round the bend that it comes back around the corner as Stalinism, I suggest you continue pushing your devotional delusions among like minded people on a political site that caters to that.

    1. Re:And yet it moves by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      QUESTION: What do you get when you try to cover up bullshit with more bullshit?
      ANSWER: Deeper in bullshit.

      You a proven bullshitter!. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

  104. You've proven nothing in this thread by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Come on now - you've had the graph you don't understand, the law that does not say what you pretend it does and despite thus not having a source that confirms your silly assertion you keep bleating for one from me - despite a wind chart effectively doing the job of indicating if there is wind or not. It is very clear where the bullshit is being sprayed from.
    Save me from utter losers that think politics trumps reality.

    1. Re:You've proven nothing in this thread by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Still no source to back up your contentions?

      QUESTION: How do you keep people from noticing your big pile of bullshit?
      ANSWER: Attempt to divert their attention.

      You continue to perform the trademarks acts of a proven bullshitter!. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

    2. Re:You've proven nothing in this thread by dbIII · · Score: 1

      You have failed to prove that the wind stops over continents while I have shown that it does not, as nearly any child ever the age of twelve could do.

    3. Re:You've proven nothing in this thread by dbIII · · Score: 1

      In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage

      I suggest that you dedicate some time to learning what the graph you are using as a prop represents so that you can explain your imagined pattern well enough for others to notice it instead of wasting time here.

    4. Re:You've proven nothing in this thread by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      I never said the wind stops over continents. How fucking stupid are you?

      QUESTION: How does one get out of a big pile of his own bullshit?
      ANSWER: Step 1 = admit your are in it.


      You have been caught chin deep in your own bullshit!. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

  105. This sums up your approach very well by dbIII · · Score: 1
    This sums up your approach of moving the goalposts from a simple case of wind or no wind to the graph that you do not understand:

    ANSWER: Attempt to divert their attention.

    Thank you for clearly outlining your method of attempting to refute my statement that the wind does not stop - goalpost moving. After all, what you were objecting to was my "The thing with wind, as any child who watches the TV weather knows, is that it is always blowing somewhere" comment. Why object to obvious reality in such a way?
    That's why I've been laughing at you all this time while trying to keep relatively polite and merely treat you like a very slow and disruptive student that should never have enroled.

    1. Re:This sums up your approach very well by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I was away a few days. I imagine you are still in your dream world, where Germans use windmills for peaking and the real data isn't as important as your wind charts. I have not moved any goal posts. I am still working on getting you to admit you fabricated your idea that Germans use windmills for peaking. I know you cannot provide a source, because you made it up, and after all this time, and various attempts to move in another direction, you are still stuck with your failure to back up your own bullshit. So, here we are, nobody else reading, and you and I both know your fabrication... so, I'll make sure we don't misdirect and get back to the crux of the matter, which is;

      You have been caught chin deep in your own bullshit!. Cite your sources or admit it.

      You have already proven you ignore facts and obvious data, so what good is it to have a discussion until you admit it. You didn't like the variability in the total wind generation chart for Germany, so you fabricated the contention that in Germany wind is turned on and off for peaking, and conventional sources are not used for peaking. You made it up, and you won't admit it.

      I have shown you the actual data from Germany. The charts clearly show there is no correlation between wind output and peaking. In fact, there are multiple points on the charts that show high wind output during low energy usage, and low wind output during high energy usage. The graphs also show how conventional power correlates with peaking, clearly with zero ambiguity. But you ignore it and still stick with your fabricated contentions.

      I have shown you the actual law that required use of all available wind power, all the time. You then said it might not be actual law! A clear display of willful ignorance.

      AND NOW YOU ARE IN A CORNER AND MAKING UP NEW SHIT THAT YOU CAN'T BACK UP! You contend that "Wind has a lot of down time for maintenance". But ignore the fact that even if it were true, it would not be noticeable on the charts because you already took pains to point out how small each wind generator is. So now you contradict your own bullshit with even more bullshit, none of which you can cite a source for. I will be sure to remind you in the future that you contend wind needs a lot of down time for maintenance.

      You are a bullshitter who makes stuff up. Cite your sources or admit it.

  106. Wisconsin by Gruff+2005 · · Score: 1

    Here in Wisconsin, USA we have only one electricity provider WE- Energies. There policy is if a customer installs solar and is connected to their grid they charge you a higher rate. That's totally fucked up. Their a damn monopoly. Meanwhile their monthly rate for using their service always increases. There was a protest across from their headquarters in Milwaukee lately how much good it did? Probably none. I barrage them with petitions and encourage everyone else to do the same via social media we'll see what happen's. I'm sure though there lobbying prettily heavily to keep things the same as in the good old day's. Wake up to new technology, Germany is the prime example.

  107. Of course you did and it's in your posting history by dbIII · · Score: 1

    I have not moved any goal posts

    Look at my post immediately before your first reply - OBVIOUS ISN'T IT? Why pretend otherwise. You did a goalpost shift in some silly attempt to "blind me with science", yet for some reason you have less than the average general knowledge on the topic you did the goalpost shift into - and took it upon yourself to attack a former power industry engineer while so disarmed!
    What an utterly pathetic performance and a example to hold up as how stupid someone can look why they put blind ideology before really obvious reality.
    No wind? Anywhere? How fucking stupid? Oh it's not stupid you say, I have this graph that if you squint at just in the right way you can see some sort of pattern. What's the graph of I ask? Some sort of power shit that is beneath your dignity to understand you say.

    What an utterly pathetic performance. Especially all that juvenile shouting to a crowd that isn't there. Whoever trained you for your role in society would be ashamed of you looking at all that drivel you have expelled onto the page above. All presumably so you can be a good comrade and attack an industry that your personal little Stalin dislikes, maybe so you can be promoted to commissar or blackboard monitor or something. What a pathetic weak willed creature you are. I taught at University for a while and was exposed to the losers in the political clubs and you remind me very much of the ones that devoted far too much effort to bullshit and did not pass their degrees.

  108. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    I see you can write a lot of bullshit, but not admit to your fabrication. I showed you real data, you are the one that had a problem with it. YOu even put words in my mouth, as i never said the wind stops. Interpret as you like. In the end, we both know you fabricated your contention about German windmills being used for peaking because you didn't like the real world data. That you make stuff up and think it is justified is very telling about you as a person.

  109. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by dbIII · · Score: 1

    I see you can write a lot of bullshit, but not admit to your fabrication

    That pre-emptive bullshit of assigning your own actions to others is especially juvenile. What a truly pathetic creature you are. So much time waving something around as a prop when you could have learned a thing or two about it instead.

  110. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    Learned from a bullshitter?

  111. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by dbIII · · Score: 1

    You are the bait and switch loser and not me. I've got no idea why you thought that would work since you appear to have far less than normal general knowledge about electricity generation and distribution.

  112. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    Spoken by one who contends that German windmills are used for peaking. One of the stupidest things I've ever heard, and a clear act of desperation to explain real world results that don't match your theoretical wind scenarios.

  113. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Spoken by one who contends that German windmills are used for peaking

    They are not base load and more of them are brought online when base load is not enough - fits the definition perfectly. As I wrote above you appear to have far less than what would be expected for general knowledge on the topic so it was a very poor choice for your bait and switch. Perhaps you should limit your very long and repetitive misdirections to something related to your competency?

    theoretical wind scenarios

    A weather map is not theoretical. Imagined patterns in a graph that depends on a lot of secondary factors is theoretical at best. Yet another utterly pathetic act of attempting to displace your own bad behaviour onto others.

  114. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    Still no source for your fabricated contentions regarding windmill usage in Germany, I see.

  115. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by dbIII · · Score: 1

    It's extremely clear in that graph you provided where all but one of the peaks shown displays a much larger supply of wind power than off the peak, but that's not the point, that's just where you shifted the goalposts too and failed with your silly little bluff. Your own source disproves your statement instead of reinforcing it, and it in no way addresses the obvious reality you objected to of there being wind blowing somewhere so long as you have a big enough electricity network. Europe is certainly big enough. North America - making such an objection as yours does not appear to be sane when considering such a scale. That's where reality denial for the sake of politics gets you. The Berlin wall fell years ago and people are going to make money out of windmills whether you hate the idea of such capitalism or not.

  116. Re:Of course you did and it's in your posting hist by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 1

    More unsubstantiated bullshit. IT WAS YOU that tried to rationalize the real world variability of Germany's wind output with fabricated contentions. I am no longer reading any post from you in this thread that does not contain a link to a credible source that describes windmill operation in the manner you suggest. If I don't see that link, post ignored. You wasted enough of my time.

  117. You brought up Germany not me by dbIII · · Score: 1

    IT WAS YOU that tried to rationalize the real world variability of Germany's wind output

    You brought up your report from Germany - maybe you should have read it and gained some understanding of what the graphs meant first before your pathetic goalpost shift and ridiculous cut and paste repetition. Why did you bother to waste so much time when you had nothing to say apart from from a bait and switch bluff?