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brucedownunder2 Guru
Joined: 14/09/2005 Location: AustraliaPosts: 1548 |
Posted: 01:14am 27 Oct 2010 |
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The nsw govt has just reduced from midnight tonite , the 60c down to 20c 's...
Lovely little minds ...these govt people....
Bruce Bushboy |
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VK4AYQ Guru
Joined: 02/12/2009 Location: AustraliaPosts: 2539 |
Posted: 01:56am 27 Oct 2010 |
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Smoke and Mirrors from a broke Labor government, The one thing that politicians are good for apart from dog food, is lying and breaking promises, Read from SMH
Note that they are penalizing those who trying to improve the environment and not penalizing the commercial producers, this government is on the skids, big time.
More Waffle and male bovine excrement that emerges from the mouth of politicians every time they open their mouth.
All the best
Bob
Bid to put brakes on runaway electricity prices
Brian Robins
October 27, 2010 - 12:10PM
The NSW government has moved to rein in surging electricity prices.
From midnight tonight it will cut the price paid for electricity bought under its generous solar power scheme.
And it will review capital spending by power companies.
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Household power prices have already risen by up to 13 per cent this year, and they within three years they could go up by 42 per cent under power company increments approved by the federal and state governments.
NSW Premier Kristina Keneally said today the review of spending plans by the electricity companies would be concluded in time for them to make revised applications to the federal government's Australian Energy Regulator by early next year. That could see a slowing in price rises.
The popular solar scheme, which has seen a big take up by families, would have added a further $4 billion to the cost of electricity, representing $80-$130 per household per year.
This will now be reduced as a result of the decision to slash from 60c to 20c per kilowatt hour the price families get for feeding solar energy into the electricity grid.
That comes into effect from midnight for all new solar applications.
There has been a flood of solar installations and Ms Keneally said today: "If we continue at this rate ... we would generate about $4 billion in costs.
"We are slowing down the scheme to avoid $2.5 billion of costs being passed on to households."
NSW decided to introduced a "gross" feed-in tariff scheme, whereby households receive 60c per kilowatt hour, unlike other states which introduced a "net" scheme, where households received payment only for electricity sold into the power grid.
This overly generous scheme has sparked a surge in the uptake of solar panels in NSW.
Already, 101 megawatts of capacity has been installed, and applications are being processed which will see that rise to 193 megawatts over the next few months.
When the scheme was introduced at the start of the year, it was anticipated that it would result in the installation of 300 megawatts of generating capacity over the six year life of the scheme.
Households with systems already installed, or applied for, will receive the 60c tariff, although all new applications received after mid-night tonight will be receive the lower 20c tariff.
Ms Keneally said that since the scheme was planned, the price of panels has more than halved, so that households have been able to recocver the cost of installing solar panel systems in two years, rather than the eight years anticipated initially.
Edited by VK4AYQ 2010-10-28 Foolin Around |
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brucedownunder2 Guru
Joined: 14/09/2005 Location: AustraliaPosts: 1548 |
Posted: 03:04am 27 Oct 2010 |
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A rethink ,,,,
I'm in Qld. so I'm on a "Net" feed-in.. so, thats why I don't see a big rebate.. I'm home all day every day , so applicances ,TV, Internet, Etc are on most of the daylight time ... whereas, if we were working ,then the feed-in would be approx 8 hours a day.
So, I'm happy with my $355 1Kw system .
Bruce Bushboy |
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VK4AYQ Guru
Joined: 02/12/2009 Location: AustraliaPosts: 2539 |
Posted: 03:34am 27 Oct 2010 |
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Hi Bruce
I am in the same situation as you so all isnt lost in QLD, it just gets up my nose that where some useful gains in pollution reduction could be made, they step in and ruin the incentive for people to be involved.
My little system has averaged 5 kw a day since installation, and with a bit extra from the wind and a couple of other panels has reduced my bill by 80% so its well worth it.
Once I get the next mill up and running that should get me to a $0 bill, but the biggest contributor was the SHWS.
All the best
Bob Foolin Around |
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GWatPE
Senior Member
Joined: 01/09/2006 Location: AustraliaPosts: 2127 |
Posted: 04:10am 27 Oct 2010 |
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The Gross feed in tarif on total energy produced does not encourage the household to reduce energy consumption, wheras the net scheme does. The gross tarif on energy produced only offsets the household costs and gives the energy provider a green energy component without having to do much for it. I am not surprised that the NSW GOV has had to reduce the value.
The SA scheme on net exported power was legislated to be govt backed for 20 years, and the govt is planning on increasing the feed in tarif from 44c to 54c per unit.
I cannot see how the relatively small number of solar installs can be blamed for these rising costs. There may be a small contributing factor, but the govt is subsidizing the export premium and not the power company. The exported power has virtually nil transmission losses, and the power companies get to recharge other customers for the power. The power companies are still making significant profits, so it seems that this increasing power cost spiral is a money grab to profit investers. The solar aspect is just a poor excuse.
Gordon.
Edited by GWatPE 2010-10-28 become more energy aware |
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neil0mac Senior Member
Joined: 26/12/2009 Location: AustraliaPosts: 210 |
Posted: 09:14am 27 Oct 2010 |
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Any NSW people have till 16th Nov to apply IF they have already made a non-refundable deposit on equipment.
Our group are set to get their $7.3 M (at 'normal' retail prices) bunch of panels and get the 60 Cents.
Our local installer is already looking to move interstate in the coming year when work disappears almost entirely.
Anyone interested in setting up a buying group like ours should start looking for a 'dis-placed' NSW installer - we are looking at <$10K (maybe only $8K?)for a 5KW system. |
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neil0mac Senior Member
Joined: 26/12/2009 Location: AustraliaPosts: 210 |
Posted: 11:13pm 27 Oct 2010 |
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Big discussion on .... http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-replies.cfm?t=1563139&p =-1#bottom |
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brucedownunder2 Guru
Joined: 14/09/2005 Location: AustraliaPosts: 1548 |
Posted: 11:55pm 27 Oct 2010 |
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Can't open that link ,Neil . tried 2 whirlpool forums ,can't find it
Bruce Bushboy |
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neil0mac Senior Member
Joined: 26/12/2009 Location: AustraliaPosts: 210 |
Posted: 12:31am 28 Oct 2010 |
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Search for (Google (?) ... nsw feed in tarrif chnages midnight!!!
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