Sure it does. A transmission system that carries 1kwh a day is far cheaper than a transmission system that carries 1000Mwh a day. One of the benefits of DER is the reduction in transmission required, since there is local generation to compensate for any shortfall due to a limited distribution system.
Of course for that to work you need a smarter grid, one that can intelligently respond to both demand and generation. And that's $$ the utilities don't want to spend. The easier solution is to just raise rates and build more transmission. This isn't some nefarious plot on their part; it's just what they are used to and what they have been doing for the past 100 years.
California's New TOU rates based on Income and CA Solar future
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I have a friend who left ca and went to Texas... his property taxes are insane.
I live in Ca and pay .14 during winter and slightly lest than .19 per KwH for electricity. We all live where we want, and no way in hell I would live anywhere other than Ca. No humidity, no hurricanes. To each their own.Leave a comment:
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I guess it differs depending on what I read that provides detail on what the CA populace is doing. I also don't doubt that some places in the US are more expensive to live in then others. Pick and choose but do your research.
Here in Florida (at least where I live) property taxes are reasonable and power is less then $0.10/kWh.
I live in Ca and pay .14 during winter and slightly lest than .19 per KwH for electricity. We all live where we want, and no way in hell I would live anywhere other than Ca. No humidity, no hurricanes. To each their own.Leave a comment:
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Two golden rules of government.........
1. If you want more of something.....subsidize it.
2. If you want less of something.....tax it.Leave a comment:
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Ironically two people I know who moved to Texas brag about no income taxes. When I ask them about their property taxes I find out they pay more in property taxes than my combined property taxes and income taxes. California is still the most populous State and it is getting crowded so we can afford to send some people elsewhere.
Here in Florida (at least where I live) property taxes are reasonable and power is less then $0.10/kWh.Leave a comment:
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Ironically two people I know who moved to Texas brag about no income taxes. When I ask them about their property taxes I find out they pay more in property taxes than my combined property taxes and income taxes. California is still the most populous State and it is getting crowded so we can afford to send some people elsewhere.Leave a comment:
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In the phone business, and later in the electric power business, it
was decided that those in the country should get the same service
as the town and city customers, at the same cost. So from tthat time
a century or so ago, the city customers have been subsidizing the
lines to the country. Is that wrong or unfair? It has been considered
OK that everyone pays the same rate for a long time.
Well, solar and renewable energy owners and the government want the benefits of non-fossil fuel energy. Lets give it to them and work as partners with public utilities....just keep the subsidy requirements away from the public POCOs. There are many schemes to accomplish this goal in a sane and economic fashion. The POCOs will adjust to sane regulatory processes. It's just idiotic to me that some state regulators picked the schemes that are the most likely to NOT succeed.
Last edited by DanS26; 12-08-2023, 09:00 PM.Leave a comment:
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In the phone business, and later in the electric power business, it
was decided that those in the country should get the same service
as the town and city customers, at the same cost. So from tthat time
a century or so ago, the city customers have been subsidizing the
lines to the country. Is that wrong or unfair? It has been considered
OK that everyone pays the same rate for a long time.
Several decades ago I managed to get my total electric bill below
$20 a month, seasons the furnace did not run. That was mostly the
connect fee, which I took as covering fixed costs like lines and
transformers. I am sure the PoCo did not like it, but politically
would not dare to complain about me being so efficient.
Now I am in a similar situation. I pay the connect fee, and use very
little electricity. Is this so different? The main difference is, I am
helping the PoCo level their load (reducing transmission costs) and
give them some 2000 kWh of free energy most years. The peak
energy I send out largely goes to run my neighbors AC, virtually no
extra transmission cost involved.
I would not be too upset if the PoCo got to keep 1 of every 10 kWh
I generated, that encourages my efficiency and costs me little. But
we are not going to practically account for the movement of every
electron volt. What has sometimes happened, is a PoCo has
taken a couple pieces of the above puzzle, and hugely exagerated
them while ignoring any parts that reduce their cost, or the costs of
very efficient consumers without solar. Their objective is not to be
fair, but find ways to drive private solar outside of practical. Is solar
good, but private solar bad? Bruce RoeLeave a comment:
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The POCOs need to be made partners rather than adversaries in this transition to distributed and renewable energy. How do you do that?
Well first, you do not force POCOs to purchase power at retail rates....that is idiotic and creates the kind of goofy power economics we see across the US and especially CA where rooftop solar is becoming a large factor in the utility calculations for profitability.
Second, it is not the POCO's responsibility to encourage distributed energy production. If the government wants more solar then let the government directly subsidize the homeowner. Instead of a 30% energy credit, make it 80% or 90% credit. Require the POCOs to purchase distributed power but get the POCOs out of the subsidy picture. Now everybody is happy except the taxpayers and that is the government's intent in the first place.
Finally, as renewables and distributed generation increase the regulators have to keep a keen eye on base load generation. Working with the POCOs, the regulators need to make sure the lights stay on no matter what.Leave a comment:
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You and Bruce need to get together.....the transmission and distribution system is a sunk (ie fixed) cost. It doesn't make any difference if that system carries 1kwh or thousands of Mwh.....the cost has to be amortized over the system life. The POCO has to recoup that investment or go bankrupt. There is no "savings" if POCOs do not use those lines.....they still have to be paid for whether they are used or not. It is a sunk cost that has to be recouped.
We see that backward argument that the POCO's are saving money on transmission all the time....it makes no sense from an economic point of view.
Remember that the POCO is in competition with the co-generators (home owners with solar) and will fight to get back on top. You won't be able to stop them unless you decide who you want to run the government there and who will be the PUC friends.Leave a comment:
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You and Bruce need to get together.....the transmission and distribution system is a sunk (ie fixed) cost. It doesn't make any difference if that system carries 1kwh or thousands of Mwh.....the cost has to be amortized over the system life. The POCO has to recoup that investment or go bankrupt. There is no "savings" if POCOs do not use those lines.....they still have to be paid for whether they are used or not. It is a sunk cost that has to be recouped.
We see that backward argument that the POCO's are saving money on transmission all the time....it makes no sense from an economic point of view.Leave a comment:
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The policy of rewarding and subsidizing residential solar may not have been bad for some of the reasons you describe but the methods to implement the subsidy could have been better thought out IMHO to avoid many of the unintended bad consequences.
The POCOs were never 100% on board and it ends up being an adversarial relationship with regulators resulting in the homeowners being caught in the middle.
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Fixed it for you.
The POCOs don't want anyone in their business.
The biggest POCO here (APS) secretly spent almost 13 million dollars getting their hand-picked candidates elected to the "independent" Arizona Corporation Commission (who then quickly changed the grid-tie contract rules heavily in favor of the POCOs). When the news of this "dark money" was finally discovered, the courts found it was legal. How can it be legal for a monopoly utility to secretly use 13 million dollar of customer payments to support two candidates who are supposed to be impartial public servants that pledge to protect the public from an over-aggressive utility?
APS acknowledges spending millions to elect Corporation Commission members, after years of questionsAPS and its parent company Pinnacle West Capital Corp. made the disclosure in response to a subpoena from Corporation Commissioner Sandra Kennedy
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The policy of rewarding and subsidizing residential solar may not have been bad for some of the reasons you describe but the methods to implement the subsidy could have been better thought out IMHO to avoid many of the unintended bad consequences.
The POCOs were never 100% on board and it ends up being an adversarial relationship with regulators resulting in the homeowners being caught in the middle.
Leave a comment:
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Lets be real.......why they think our costs should be connected to our income is unreal. Imagine doing that in other areas. Hey, that house will be 300k if you make this income, but if you make that income, the house is 495k.
Imagine buying groceries and having prices be determined by your income.
This is about to unleash a revolt on these politicians IMO. Ive been a dem my entire life. Tax me based upon income and create policies to help low income.
But tax me here, then charge me more for services based upon income???/ Ill work to get you voted out like never before.Last edited by Reid1boys; 12-06-2023, 01:40 PM.Leave a comment:
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