toddh
FNG
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2016
- Messages
- 79
Power companies do buy the excess. At least they do in Indiana. It is bought back at a wholesale rate. Solar is extremely expensive and the payback is long term. Very long term.
I don’t know about all states, but generally, yes. Albeit at a discounted “wholesale” type rate, not the “retail” rate you pay for power from the grid.So, when your solar system is dumping more electricity into the grid every month that what you use, does the electric company pay you for that electricity?
That sounds like the perfect opportunity for the liberal politicians that push this stuff to make new laws requiring them to pay you for it. Ya, if they're not paying you for it.....then it makes absolutely zero sense to get solar.So far as I know, power companies no longer buy the excess electricity produced.
That was how it worked in Iowa for a period of time. We put a unit on a new house build for my grandfather 2 years ago and he barely uses half what he generates. The buyback made sense but they're limiting that program I'm told. I think we plan to branch the line and run it to a barndo and another house we have on the same property.So, when your solar system is dumping more electricity into the grid every month that what you use, does the electric company pay you for that electricity?
So, when your solar system is dumping more electricity into the grid every month that what you use, does the electric company pay you for that electricity?
There is a decent enough amount of case law that would require them to buy from you.That sounds like the perfect opportunity for the liberal politicians that push this stuff to make new laws requiring them to pay you for it. Ya, if they're not paying you for it.....then it makes absolutely zero sense to get solar.
Southern CA here. We finally bit the bullet and installed solar on our home. With the cost of electricity continuing to rise it was the only thing that made sense anymore. Our payment for the solar system is $400/month (OUCH!), but our lowest electricity bill was $430 in Jan (no AC, no Christmas lights). Our highest electricity bill was $900 in the summer months last year. Rates are planned to continue increasing so in 10 years when I'm still paying $400/month, the electicity costs in Jan without solar might be close to $500+.
Plus, now I can crank the AC during the summer months (during daylight hours of course) and not try to conserve the AC usage by only setting it to 79F.
Water under the bridge for me, as I’m already done. But good advice for anyone else considering it. We met with 4 companies, negotiated for 6 months with 2 of those. I have a pretty good grasp on how things work with my electric utility company, although this will be our first full month of billing with the solar installed…so the truth will be seen soon.Make sure you consult with at least 2 solar companies and make sure they how your electric company negotiates with customers installing solar
Water under the bridge for me, as I’m already done. But good advice for anyone else considering it. We met with 4 companies, negotiated for 6 months with 2 of those. I have a pretty good grasp on how things work with my electric utility company, although this will be our first full month of billing with the solar installed…so the truth will be seen soon.
Curious to know what makes you think your house “went up by $18000 the day you installed it”? Not being a smart ass. Really would like to know. Sounds like something a solar sales person would tell a customer.Lots of uninformed takes on here, not too surprised.
My system cost 18K, so just under 12K after the tax credit. I didn’t finance it, that ruins a lot of the pros and makes it rather expensive. My home value went up by 18K the day it was installed, so “50 years break even cost-benefit analysis” is complete hogwash. I may never have an electric bill again, and I bet in 5 years the rate for electric will be 30-50% higher than it is now.