Scot_Lover 1,876 Posted June 22, 2014 Share Posted June 22, 2014 Guys, anyone been ripped by a power company? I generate most of my power, a wind turbine, a solar array and a big battery pack in a shed under my turbine. We also have a grid connection off the inverter, shunts excess power onto the state power line network. All of this works well, we make money from it, all a bonus, really. This the latest thing they came up with. Due to weather conditions, I have not been making lots of power, no wind, cloudy days, usually together, so I pull power from the grid. When things pick up, I supply excess power as designed by this system, pushing power out onto the grid. The power company wants to charge $5 every time this system reverses from pulling power to pushing power, you get the idea? This, to my mind, is completely stupid, I have no control over this, the inverter and the "smart" meter attached to it does all the power management. Can anyone shed some light on this reasoning? How can a charge like this be justified? Link to post
steve25805 126,023 Posted June 22, 2014 Share Posted June 22, 2014 Sounds like just another kind of rip off scheme to me. If I were you I'd try and make a public issue out of it, informing the local press and maybe contacting a political representative who might be able to challenge them more effectively - if you are lucky enough to have one who is a little more useful than a fart in a spacesuit. Link to post
Scot_Lover 1,876 Posted June 24, 2014 Author Share Posted June 24, 2014 Sanity has prevailed, must have been a lot of feedback before this made my place, mail drop yesterday confirmed it would not be charged. Link to post
Lickher2 291 Posted August 27, 2015 Share Posted August 27, 2015 er, . . . .pardon me for being master of the obvious, . . . . . but doesn't everyone get ripped by power companies Link to post
likesToLick 10,216 Posted August 27, 2015 Share Posted August 27, 2015 The power companies buy any excess power from my solar panels at 5 cents per kWh. Then they sell it to my next door neighbor for 36 cents per kWh. It doesn't even have to travel over their gold plated network. Of course when I buy power from them at night, I have to pay the 36 cents too. I'm looking forward to a time when the price of household batteries becomes affordable. Link to post
Scot_Lover 1,876 Posted August 27, 2015 Author Share Posted August 27, 2015 Check out the new hybrid systems that are coming online ....... I was a little too early, lol Link to post
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