▲ | Kon5ole a day ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
>The ROI of a large PV farm must be substantially better than a home scale install. There are many benefits to letting homeowners do it. First of all you get a lot more solar deployed in much shorter time, because you mobilize hundreds of thousands of people to the effort immediately instead of having them wait for a solar plant. Homeowners pay for it, provide the area for it, hire and organize the workforce - small scale but "everywhere at once" so to speak. The government/state/county doesn't need to wait for the land to be available, raise the money, build infrastructure to transfer electricity from a new large solar site to the consumers and so on. So for the "state" the ROI is better with home installs. >responsibility for the climate crisis to consumers rather than industrial energy providers. That's where the responsibility belongs through. Most of us drove fossil fuel cars for years, which is the largest single emission source. In democracies we could have voted for guys wanting gas to cost 50 bucks per gallon, or who would prohibit any more oil and gas to be traded. We didn't. We could have refused to travel for vacations, refused to buy goods shipped from overseas and so on - but we didn't. So this is on us. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | __alexs 19 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
This mostly seems to support my statement that the ROI is worse. You cannot discount the cost of the house entirely in the equation. Many people are not even home owners. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | triceratops 21 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
> In democracies we could have voted for guys wanting gas to cost 50 bucks per gallon... So this is on us Only kind of. The oil companies dusted off the old tobacco playbook. Democracies are unfortunately terribly vulnerable to well-funded liars. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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