My traditional ernergy bill consists of an amount that can roughly be split as follows: - 10-20% transport to home - 60-70% tax - 10-30% raw energy costs This with all having profits and overhead included. LENR reactors will certainly challence such model in the Netherlands.
Apart from domestic energy usage, there will be a big development on allowing LENR based mobility (cars, planes, etc.) which will push for compact standalone operation. There will be several stages over time, probably starting with using traditional grids first and local energy generation later onwards. Op zondag 18 januari 2015 heeft <mix...@bigpond.com> het volgende geschreven: > In reply to Jed Rothwell's message of Sat, 17 Jan 2015 21:24:12 -0500: > Hi, > [snip] > > The whole distribution and control system will be > >scrapped, and that alone will cut your electric bill by half or > two-thirds. > >So even if the individual generator costs a bit more per kilowatt of > >capacity, it will be much cheaper overall. Plus it will replace your home > >space heater, with co-generation. > > But the biggest reason is that people will happily pay a higher cost/watt > for a > generator, if it means an end to regular utility bills. Utility bills also > include the utility's profit margin. > Regards, > > Robin van Spaandonk > > http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html > >