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by OrwellianChild
3523 days ago
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I strongly recommend you read the article linked here, as it explains the false equivalency of the bill. Net-metered solar reduces peak usage, reducing costs for utilities. The article has no less than 9 citations proving the point - your bill should go down as people transition to on-site solar. This bill is about entrenched utilities not wanting to compete - not about solar subsidies. Also, I believe this reasonable confusion answers @dragthor's question... :-) |
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1) it already duplicates existing law and protections, so no real reason to have this;
2) net-metering will go away.
I can see the reasoning for 1 and it's debatable if it's good enough to vote "no." I'll vote "present" on this one.
For 2, I think it really comes down to what is considered a "subsidy." In my mind, it's the installation subsidy---that is, it costs (I'm making this up as I haven't actually researched this) $20,000 to do a solar installation for a home, yet "the government" will rebate $15,000 of it (through tax breaks or an outright check---does it matter how it's done?). I don't see "net metering" as a subsidy though---you are generating a product (in the form of excess electricity) and are selling it to the power company. But having read the "fabulous" article, I just see "this will end net-metering!" without any proof.
On the power company's side, running a grid is hard. They don't just run "all the generators" at 100% all the time because doing so would harm the transmission equipment; excess load is excess heat and over time damages the equipment, so the power companies try very hard to keep the generation matching the load (generally they run a bit high to cover demand spikes but not so high as to do damage to the equipment---it's a fine line). Net metering makes this a bit harder to manage. Traditional sources are more consistent in output and can be controlled better than solar, which is dependent upon too many different conditions over the day [1].
If there's proof that "net-metering" is considered a "subsidy" by the proponents (or the power companies) and then, maybe, I'd vote "no." But the current "net-metering is going away!" fear mongering is not helping here.
[1] Especially here in Florida. It can be party cloudy and still raining. It can be clear, then two hours later overcast with a torrential downpour, then partly cloudy an hour later. You're a power company that needs to maintain power generation to within 5% of load, now do that with unpredictable power supply.