| ▲ | Fr0styMatt88 2 hours ago | |
I agree with this, but I don’t trust that it will stay this way. It always seems like there’s no real way to ‘get ahead’. They’ll always find a way to make the system cost such that it barely pays itself off, by introducing fees or cutting rebates. For example, there was a proposal in Australia to raise our fixed grid access fee from something like $1 a day to $5 a day. Or consider even just the feed-in-tariff for solar — that’s gone down as solar power has gotten cheaper, which is expected, but it’s another thing that increases that mythical payback period for the system. Now to be clear I think the tech is wonderful and would 100% have a big battery and solar system if I could, but not for financial reasons. For all intents and purposes you’re just pre-paying for the next X years of your electricity. I would at least want my battery warranty to be four times X, which it currently is not. Now in 5 years there might be battery tech that gets to that multiplier that I want and THEN I could start thinking of it as investing in ‘free electricity’. But I’m sure the government and electricity suppliers will close any loopholes they can to prevent that. | ||
| ▲ | an hour ago | parent [-] | |
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