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by masklinn
1943 days ago
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> Granted, if the cost savings were enough They probably are enough over long periods, or retailers wouldn't be profitable. However that assumes you hedge properly. If you treat your savings from "good times" as extra cash to spend you're going to get burned to the ground by the bad times. It also means you have to be extremely reactive, now you need a setup to quickly cutoff electricity if wholesale prices skyrocket, and you need to be on the ball checking wholesale prices like a whale checks their gasha. |
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Exactly, though to give a lot of customers of these plans credit, they don't have the extra cash. Griddy's own marketing says that "96% of the time," the wholesale rate is well under the average retail per-kWh rate.
This is yet another one of those hidden costs of how being lower-income is very expensive, both in actual money, and in time. Vanishingly few people have the time to be as on the ball as they'd need to for plans like this to work. And you can automate it, but that costs money many of these customers don't have.
I have no problems with plans like this existing; my issue is we set people up to fail by danging the large-print number being a very small value, while not warning people of how catastrophically it can go--and has gone--very wrong.