And when lots of high efficiency bulbs get used to save power, the power company wants to raise rates to make up the difference in income.
Bruce
Not only for higher efficiency, solar power has them worried too. Their revenue stream/strategy is getting out-dated.
The Institute for Energy Research reports solar represent 0.3% of all energy produced in the US. Why would that worry any power company?
'Growing fast' is spin, e.g., from 2011 to 2013 solar energy as a percentage of total US energy produced tripled. Fast growth. Yes. Important? It went from 0.1% to 0.3%.Because it is growing rapidly in residential use. Grid-tied systems can cut your monthly net use to zero or even negative kWh but in the same month you can draw heavy loads overnight, AC for hot days, etc.
If you are billed on net use, but the utility still needs to meet your peak demands, that isn't what most utility billing strategies are set up for. They are already shifting toward higher monthly service/connection fees versus usage.
'Growing fast' is spin, e.g., from 2011 to 2013 solar energy as a percentage of total US energy produced tripled. Fast growth. Yes. Important? It went from 0.1% to 0.3%.
Spin? As far as the impact on utilities, you don't seem to understand the grid-tied dynamic at work: meet peak demands with lower revenue. Every solar kilowatt is dinging them.
My main gripe is that they always have '40 watt equivalent' and we mainly use 100 watt incandescent.lighting.
We were all told to change from incandescent to CFL, now we're being told to change from CFL to LED. What's going to be next, and how soon?
If the next is better than LED's, I am all for it.
Solar produces 0.3% of all electricity consumed in the US. FACT
This percentage tripled in 2 years. FACT.
It's growth from a minuscule number to a slightly less minuscule number.. FACT.
Calling that fast growth is true but deceptive, i.e., spin.
When facts get in the way, hurl an insult.
Here's the link, Click Here. Argue with and insult them. Perhaps they don't understand 'grid-tied dynamics' either.
/exit.
I'm certainly not saying the changes aren't "better", in the long run, at least, but some changes are pretty expensive in the short term. I recently had all my 4' florescent lights (9 fixtures, 19 tubes) changed from magnetic ballasts to electronic and the tubes changed from T12 to T8. Yep, it's better, but it wasn't cheap.
We were all told to change from incandescent to CFL, now we're being told to change from CFL to LED. What's going to be next, and how soon?
Costco has 4' LED shop lights. I have put in 4 so far. They are brighter than what I had, half the watts.