Florida is, after all, the most anti-solar state. Foolishness...

Curt

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  On Fri, May 27, 2022 at 11:04 AM, dan penoff.com via 
Mercedes<mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:   In theory an excellent idea, but in 
practice it can be dodgy. I say that because our legislature in Florida was 
able to get a bill passed that phased out net metering for consumers, meaning 
that if you just sunk $20k-$30k into a solar system that in 2-3 years you 
weren’t going to get paid for the power you generate, or if you did, it would 
be a much lower rate that currently required by law.

That payback curve was going to get very, very flat.

Despite the sway that utilities hold over our legislators, our somewhat psycho 
governor saw the light and vetoed the bill. Had he not I think things might 
have gotten quite ugly.

-D

On May 27, 2022, at 10:56 AM, Curt Raymond via Mercedes 
<mercedes@okiebenz.com<mailto:mercedes@okiebenz.com>> wrote:

What you do is run your solar into the grid running your electric meter 
backwards during the day. This let's you essentially use the grid as a big 
battery.
With the right payment structure you can get paid daytime surge rates and only 
pay out night time rates to charge your car.
Long term plans for the northern estate include 3000w of solar.
Curt

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 On Fri, May 27, 2022 at 10:20 AM, Buggered Benzmail via 
Mercedes<mercedes@okiebenz.com<mailto:mercedes@okiebenz.com>> wrote:  Putting 
aside the environmental and international economic and security issues 
associated with lithium batteries and PV panels, I like the idea of a garage 
with PV panels to charge your car. Of course you would need storage batteries 
in your garage to collect and store the electrons from solar photons so you can 
charge your car at night. The whole process should be on the order of maybe 8% 
efficient if you’re lucky.

--FT
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On May 27, 2022, at 4:31 AM, mitch--- via Mercedes 
<mercedes@okiebenz.com<mailto:mercedes@okiebenz.com>> wrote:

When I first heard of ZEVs, I thought "Oh, you mean Remote Emissions Vehicles".
Mitch.

On 2022-05-26 17:24, dan penoff.com<http://penoff.com> via Mercedes wrote:
And I don’t want to start the back and forth up, but the electricity
to charge those batteries has to come from somewhere, and it’s likely
generated using fossil fuels at present.
So the emissions are going to come from somewhere in the process, just
not from a tailpipe on the car in this case.



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