Quindi, mentre siamo al lavoro, la nostra iniezione dai nostri pannelli torna direttamente alla compagnia energetica e quando siamo a casa la sera dobbiamo pagare il prezzo normale per kWh?

    Che tipo di idiota lo ha inventato … ?

    https://i.redd.it/ext4ifx1whme1.jpeg

    di Timop0707

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    20 commenti

    1. Tompoeske on

      You can compare contracts, for how much you get for the energy that you inject onto the grid.. (i think some of them give you nothing at all?)

      “Working as intended” I’m afraid šŸ˜‰

    2. Yanii3004 on

      Pick a job where you need to do night shifts, problem solved

    3. AnteaterStreet8875 on

      Unfortunately, there’s a logical reason for that. The energy you produce is not ā€œstackedā€ somewhere waiting for use, it is sent to the network and generates tension. That tension is detrimental, so price of electricity lowers when solar panels generate energy to promote use. When we use the most energy (5-9pm), solar panels don’t produce as much and the demand exceeds the supply. This is actually more logical to look at. Also why big energy users (chemical companies) use during the night, because of nuclear production there is again over tension at night and energy becomes virtually free. Terrible for solar panels owners but logical from an electricity point of view. Fortunately, you can do something, like smart heating/ventilation/ use of your produced energy during peak hours. At home, we have a smart grid making sure we heat when we actually produce energy.

    4. Daedeloth on

      Oh no, when I don’t want electricity, nobody else wants it either. šŸ™‚

    5. engineer_whizz on

      Yes, 1 kWh you make is not the same as the kWh from the company. In that kWh is included: costs for maintaining the energy infrastructure, taxes, investments in further energy infrastructure and other things companies need.

    6. LiamNissan on

      Hence why a home battery might be an interesting investment.

    7. Greedy-Lynx-9706 on

      Get a home/wall battery , you’re a bit late for the subsidie though.

    8. Yep, this is exactly why there’s been so many people refusing to get a digital meter. The government yet again succeeded in making a green investment completely worthless

    9. Jellybeezzz on

      Yes that’s how it works with the new digital meters. You inject electricity on the grid that someone else might be using at that time. However at night when there is no sun the electricity has to be generated with nuclear or fossil power that’s why you pay the normal price.

      If you want to benefit from your solar make sure to use heat generating appliances like cooking, washing and heating when the sun shines. There are a few suppliers that offer better prices for injected electricity. Last time I checked Bolt pays €0.05/KwH

    10. Scary_Woodpecker_110 on

      What is the problem ? You are generating energy when you don’t have a demand for it. At a time that there is a lot of energy on the grid. You will net get much for it. In the evening, with no sun, gas, nuclear power plants will have to spool up to power your home. That costs money.

      Install a battery. The old meter allowed you to use the net as a free battery, at everybody’s else’s expense.

    11. But the Walloons and the Brusselaars can keep their terugdraaiende teller. Another way of fucking the Flemish people šŸ™‚Ā 

    12. Deceptio1985 on

      Wait… so you’re telling me that when everyone is at work, there’s too much solar power and it’s worth less… and when everyone comes home and needs electricity, it costs more? Sounds like some kind of… ECONOMIC PRINCIPLE. Who could have foreseen this?!

    13. tomba_be on

      Use electricity during the day. Most devices have times you can set so they start at a specified time.

      The “idiots” that made this up, know how infrastructure works. They also made quite a few websites explaining why it works this way. If you can’t be bothered to check any of this, it’s 100% your own fault.

    14. LetsGoForPlanB on

      Schedule devices, especially energy intensive devices, to run during the day. You can automate some of this.

    15. volvop1800s on

      I bought my home battery a few years ago. Thanks to the government cashback and the energy crisis I’ve already passed my break-even point and I still have 6 years warranty left. Battery (and EV) charge with excess solar power instead of injecting it back on the grid. My house is 400m2 and fully electric and I pay 80 euros a month which are mostly the fees and not actual consumption. From April-October I take 0 kWh from the grid.Ā 

    16. Harde_Kassei on

      if you think backing up energy is free, go buy a battery?

    17. Organic-Algae-9438 on

      That’s because you think of the grid as a huge battery, which it obviously is not. A shortage of electricity is expensive but can be bought relatively cheap in neighboring countries.

      A surplus is way worse. When the sun is shining here (or when its windy) it’s probably also sunny (or windy) in the Netherlands, Germany, France etc. Selling a surplus of electricity is actually way more expensive than buying a shortage, because they probably also have a surplus then.

      I’m not saying I enjoy it, but that’s how the international energy market works.

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