A person who drives 12k miles per year in an small vehicle will need about 4000 kWh of electricity or about 600 gallons of gas. Australians are able to buy solar panels that will generate that amount of electricity for a generation for the price of gas for one or two years. Of course there are more costs associated (Installation, batteries, etc) but the cost equation is shifting very quickly.If anything I'm surprised that this is happening in an area that hasn't benefited as much from dramatic reductions in electricity costs (places with Wind + Solar without large tariff regimes) rather than Australia or the southern latitudes of the US.
epolanski|1 month ago
Costs for installation and certification in Italy is around 8 times the cost of the panels.
Panels costs are irrelevant nowadays.
The best scenario would be to focus on technology that makes it trivial to connect to your home grid so people would be able to do it on their own safely.
xattt|1 month ago
Arguments were (likely) made that the cost of wiring a house could buy 20 hand-cranked washing machines or some other phooey that came from an old paradigm.
littlestymaar|1 month ago
I'm asking because my uncle has a business of selling and installing swimming pools, he has the electrician working for him and it contemplated the possibility of installing solar panels for his customers (the more sun, the higher electricity consumption in the swimming pool because you need to filter out algaes before they bloom, so it's a perfect match and he has to do the wiring anyway) and the main reason why he abandoned the idea was the cost of the panels themselves.
I feel there's a huge disconnect between the talk about technology and real life. It's like when people keep talking about how battery cost have plummeted in recent years and how they now dirt cheap, yet when you want to buy one, electric cars are not cheaper than 4 years ago.
mekdoonggi|1 month ago
Particularly for the Southern US, I feel that the costs will continue to drop until the transition will be very sudden, and there will be a rude awakening of sorts.
wil421|1 month ago
adefu|1 month ago
inkyoto|1 month ago
As of now, Australia has some of the lowest costs of solar panel installation in the world – the federal and state/territory governments have been providing subsidies to households to increase solar energy uptake across the nation, and, as a result, the popularity of solar panels has exploded, driving the costs down.
> If anything I'm surprised that this is happening in an area that hasn't benefited as much from dramatic reductions in electricity costs (places with Wind + Solar without large tariff regimes) rather than Australia […]
Energy costs from a conventional grid have actually more than doubled across Australia (in comparison to 2008). With solar, there was a perverse situation in Australia for a while when households connected to the grid could export the solar-generated electricity and get paid for it, but that did not lower consumer electricity prices, which kept on climbing instead.
More recently, though, paying to export – a limited feature that applies only under certain network tariffs and/or certain retail plans (especially wholesale pass-through plans during negative price periods) – has been introduced, but the battery technology has also caught up.
So with the advent of new battery technology, households have now become awash with an abundance of electricity that they can now use to, e.g., run air-conditioning if not 24x7 then very close to it, which has been a great boon for the last couple of summers when Australia has gone through bursts of severe hotwaves across the country (temperatures varied between mid-40's and as high as +50 degrees Celsius last week in some parts of Adelaide, South Australia).
jillesvangurp|1 month ago
bogeholm|1 month ago
Electricity has been comparatively cheap (to DK at least) for a long time due to all the hydro.
I remember as a kid when visiting family in Norway, we were surprised that there were no rules on turning off the lights when closing the door to an empty room :)
ZeroGravitas|1 month ago
tonyedgecombe|1 month ago
seanmcdirmid|1 month ago
jansan|1 month ago
However, it also helps that they are good at long term planning.
speed_spread|1 month ago
nobodyandproud|1 month ago
The US fucked up, but give it time.