California is pushing the limits of crowdsourced energy
California is pushing the limits of crowdsourced energy

California is pushing the limits of crowdsourced energy

California is pushing the limits of crowdsourced energy
California is pushing the limits of crowdsourced energy
Pacific Gas & Electric and other top California power companies
Here is my problem. This feels more like an ad for Pacific Gas & Electric and Tesla. The only companies named are these two. Where I live in Cali, has a municipal electric company that is GREAT. Tell anyone around here that you are getting PG&E and they will rethink the move.
I'm so glad we are using more clean energy but, they should be owned by the community.
Great, now let’s insulate our properties and stop using energy hog window A/C units! Let’s use dishwashers to reduce water demand! Let’s allow emergency vehicles to change the traffic lights to make our streets safer!
Lol, just kidding. None of that will ever happen. This state will do anything but solve simple, impactful issues.
Why do we always need to complain that something good isn't good enough? Yes, they didn't solve the world's problems. They did make a nice step in the right direction.
Also; convert to roundabouts and you don’t need traffic lights at all. Traffic lights are expensive to buy and they use a fuck load of electricity. Also, fewer fatal accidents with roundabouts.
I agree with this in spirit but they’ve actually installed traffic lights at existing roundabouts because I assume the smartphone-obsessed drivers kept causing accidents.
Roundabouts really suck when they're saturated, even worse than standard light-controlled intersections. That's why there are still traffic lights controlling entry into roundabouts in high-volume cases.
Uncontrolled roundabouts work best at medium to low traffic volumes.
My friends have 2 mini split heat pumps that could not keep their 1600ft² cool. So they bought 2 $100 window units from home depot. Their energy use dropped $300/mo. Or at least, the energy equivalent. They've got solar and dont pay for their electricity.
The window units use less energy and keep their home cooler.
The magic of an inverter system only happens at lower load. If they're undersized, they run full tilt at minimum efficiency.
Even if window AC units were the sole source of climate change energy use, who cares? "Efficient" appliances have always just been a twofold gambit.
It's all just about capitalist profits.
If you put a window AC unit in a field with a solar array to power it all day, it would make zero difference to the planet.
I wonder if this compensation is enough to cover the cost of more frequent battery replacement due to the extra wear.
I was sure you were wrong ant that $150 was just an incentive to be in the program. That battery owners would be paid for their power.
You were right, though. It really is a flat $150 per year. The company who manages the energy from the batteries gets paid for the energy, not the battery owner.
My Tesla Powerwall is part of a VPP program in the northeast. We have 3 powerwalls in total that typically put back 20 KWh during VPP events. Last year, the first year we did this, we were reimbursed $1459.97 at the end of the season. That energy returned to the grid also counts as a credit on our electric bill.
Makes me glad I don’t live in CA.
Edit: I guess it’s the sheer size of the VPP they tested in CA that’s the real news here. The one I’m part of currently shows 1463 homes involved in it.
I get by paid per kw consumed. And it’s a lot, like $2 per.
VPP is great and should be the future for nearly all buildings. Distributed power can avoid system-wide blackouts.
It’s also an opt-in program, and I can override it if I feel the need too.
I just wish it was easier to get smaller companies like Ecoflow onto the program.