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June 11, 2011 at 10:05 AM in reply to: Robert Shiller – home prices could slide for 20 years? #703756
patb
Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=walterwhite]theya dd to your cost but they also add to the electricity produced, pushing forward your payback date. since there’s installation costs that remain stable, more is better, but not that much better. the panels are most of the cost[/quote]
But at what rate will sdge buy the excess generated electricity? You are looking at having only a single purchaser that will set his price for your “product”. The risk your initial investment would be too costly will still be quite high.[/quote]
Nothing prevents you from reselling the power to Other then SDG&E.
If you want to get technical you could wheel your power through the grid
and become a mini-enron, or you could go low tech, get a Kill-A-Watt
meter, and run a extension cord to a neighbor.In Virginia there is no Feed in tariff, so I reccomend people sell power
to neighbors as barter.patb
Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=walterwhite]theya dd to your cost but they also add to the electricity produced, pushing forward your payback date. since there’s installation costs that remain stable, more is better, but not that much better. the panels are most of the cost[/quote]
But at what rate will sdge buy the excess generated electricity? You are looking at having only a single purchaser that will set his price for your “product”. The risk your initial investment would be too costly will still be quite high.[/quote]
Nothing prevents you from reselling the power to Other then SDG&E.
If you want to get technical you could wheel your power through the grid
and become a mini-enron, or you could go low tech, get a Kill-A-Watt
meter, and run a extension cord to a neighbor.In Virginia there is no Feed in tariff, so I reccomend people sell power
to neighbors as barter.patb
Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=walterwhite]theya dd to your cost but they also add to the electricity produced, pushing forward your payback date. since there’s installation costs that remain stable, more is better, but not that much better. the panels are most of the cost[/quote]
But at what rate will sdge buy the excess generated electricity? You are looking at having only a single purchaser that will set his price for your “product”. The risk your initial investment would be too costly will still be quite high.[/quote]
Nothing prevents you from reselling the power to Other then SDG&E.
If you want to get technical you could wheel your power through the grid
and become a mini-enron, or you could go low tech, get a Kill-A-Watt
meter, and run a extension cord to a neighbor.In Virginia there is no Feed in tariff, so I reccomend people sell power
to neighbors as barter.patb
Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=walterwhite]theya dd to your cost but they also add to the electricity produced, pushing forward your payback date. since there’s installation costs that remain stable, more is better, but not that much better. the panels are most of the cost[/quote]
But at what rate will sdge buy the excess generated electricity? You are looking at having only a single purchaser that will set his price for your “product”. The risk your initial investment would be too costly will still be quite high.[/quote]
Nothing prevents you from reselling the power to Other then SDG&E.
If you want to get technical you could wheel your power through the grid
and become a mini-enron, or you could go low tech, get a Kill-A-Watt
meter, and run a extension cord to a neighbor.In Virginia there is no Feed in tariff, so I reccomend people sell power
to neighbors as barter.patb
Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=walterwhite]theya dd to your cost but they also add to the electricity produced, pushing forward your payback date. since there’s installation costs that remain stable, more is better, but not that much better. the panels are most of the cost[/quote]
But at what rate will sdge buy the excess generated electricity? You are looking at having only a single purchaser that will set his price for your “product”. The risk your initial investment would be too costly will still be quite high.[/quote]
Nothing prevents you from reselling the power to Other then SDG&E.
If you want to get technical you could wheel your power through the grid
and become a mini-enron, or you could go low tech, get a Kill-A-Watt
meter, and run a extension cord to a neighbor.In Virginia there is no Feed in tariff, so I reccomend people sell power
to neighbors as barter.patb
ParticipantI’ve seen solar hot water payoff in 3-5 years with very little effort
It’s also a starter system, the kids learn to clean bird poo
And you dry run itpatb
ParticipantI’ve seen solar hot water payoff in 3-5 years with very little effort
It’s also a starter system, the kids learn to clean bird poo
And you dry run itpatb
ParticipantI’ve seen solar hot water payoff in 3-5 years with very little effort
It’s also a starter system, the kids learn to clean bird poo
And you dry run itpatb
ParticipantI’ve seen solar hot water payoff in 3-5 years with very little effort
It’s also a starter system, the kids learn to clean bird poo
And you dry run itpatb
ParticipantI’ve seen solar hot water payoff in 3-5 years with very little effort
It’s also a starter system, the kids learn to clean bird poo
And you dry run itpatb
ParticipantSolar hot water is a slam dunk…
PV depends.
California has some great credits and San Diego is good solar country.
Installation mtters a lot, you need a. Good south facing roof
patb
ParticipantSolar hot water is a slam dunk…
PV depends.
California has some great credits and San Diego is good solar country.
Installation mtters a lot, you need a. Good south facing roof
patb
ParticipantSolar hot water is a slam dunk…
PV depends.
California has some great credits and San Diego is good solar country.
Installation mtters a lot, you need a. Good south facing roof
patb
ParticipantSolar hot water is a slam dunk…
PV depends.
California has some great credits and San Diego is good solar country.
Installation mtters a lot, you need a. Good south facing roof
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