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by outop
653 days ago
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Isn't it possible that such a system will over-produce 99% of the year and that therefore, the marginal cost will almost always be $0? 'Take my energy and allow me to stop accelerating my flywheels which regulate production' seems more plausible than 'someone would always like more heat for something' (what?) Or possibly 'take my energy and I'll cut off some of the people using spare energy to do low priority, low value computation for free'? |
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You can imagine home appliances having an 'eco' setting which runs the appliance like the washing or the dishwasher at the cheapest time in the next 12 hours.
Or the water heating systems which heat more water when prices are cheap.
Or heaters which switch between natural gas and heat pump based on price.
Or electric car chargers which charge during the cheapest hours.
(all of these already exist, but none are yet common).
Over the long term there is also plenty of elasticity. If electric heating is expensive, people will install gas/oil heaters when they renovate. If electricity is cheap, more people buy electric cars. With cheap electricity, maybe fewer people decide to add more insulation to their houses. Businesses don't upgrade energy inefficient equipment to be more energy efficient, etc.
Plenty of demand elasticity in both the short and long term. End result: As long as the market is unconstrained, prices won't hit zero more than say ~5% of the time.