The new microgeneration support scheme is being designed to provide a route to market for citizens and communities which will allow them to generate their own renewable electricity, such as from solar panels on their roofs, “and receive a fair price when they sell the excess into the grid”
sphinxicus wrote: » We got out "smart" meter installed the other week so that's one step in the right direction for our place anyway
phester28 wrote: » If I'm reading this right then its not for the individual house to be feeding in. Only communities and businesses. That is what the Greens were pushing over the last few years too. I would call it regressive and anticompetitive if it turns out to prevent the average consumer who does meet a certain threshold Edit I've just re-read and it does say Citizens, so hopefully I was wrong. During last year the greens were only talking about group schemes and businesses So I though they were following the same line
The actions to develop micro-generation policy will assess these and other options. It should be noted that micro-generation is a means to increase citizen participation in the energy transition through the generation of renewable electricity for self-consumption and the export of excess electricity generated to the grid. It can be a driver for engaging citizens in further energy efficiency investments in their homes and businesses.
phester28 wrote: » I hope your right. Smart meters do have the capacity for net metering but its primary focus was to remote meter read using gsm
KCross wrote: » One of the statements in the consultation is that this option is being considered and they are asking for feedback on it... A minimum rate, proposed to be set by the CRU, will be made available based on the average Day Ahead Market (DAM) wholesale electricity price Anyone know what that would mean in real terms? I know day ahead wholesale prices vary wildly and even go negative but they mention "average"... is the average known somewhere?
MAXFANTANA wrote: » https://www.cru.ie/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/CRU20089-Energy-and-Water-Monitoring-Report-for-2019.pdf This is the best I can find.
sphinxicus wrote: » Wonder will they remove the install grant when the FIT becomes available.
slave1 wrote: » When it comes to FIT it needs to be Net Basis, for every kw you export you get credit with your supplier for any kw you import, crude but simple and fair as fair can be...
cruizer101 wrote: » In a way the FIT should vary throughout that day, and I think with smart meters it should be possible, but I doubt it will happen.
mp3guy wrote: » Pat Kenny show today aat 2:28:00 Eamon Ryan lets B3 slip as the minimum BER required https://www.newstalk.com/listen-back.
graememk wrote: » If it's true the BER rating is ridiculous for a FIT. The two aren't related at all.
graememk wrote: » If it's true the BER rating is ridiculous for a FIT. The two aren't related at all. Solar doesn't heat your house* and on the days that you would be exporting.. you won't be using heat anyway *(You could via a resistive load with an eddi/or with monitoring and smart plugs)
KCross wrote: » They arent related. Their stated reasoning is that they want people to first focus their finances on improving their BER and then look at Solar after that. Bang for the buck so to speak. e.g. If someone has €5k to spend and is in a 80s bungalow with a crap BER they want that person to spend the money on insulation first before putting up Solar PV with a view to "making money on FiT".
KCross wrote: » up Solar PV with a view to "making money on FiT".
graememk wrote: » You could see the ads now,.. and the sales pitches!! Although you'd never make money with a fit. I done napkin math on a theoretical pv array on an outfarm, full 6kw (power used is super low either lights or a well pump). The pv would cover the line rental and our current annual usage - just about. Payoff was about 15 years. Before we would "make money"
The high level emerging options are: 1. Implementation of a proposed Clean Export Guarantee (CEG) tariff for excess electricity exported to the grid from renewables self-consumers and renewable energy communities that reflects the fair market value of the electricity, aligned to the requirements of Article 21 Clause 2 (d) of the Renewable Energy Directive (EU/ 2018/2001). A minimum rate, proposed to be set by the CRU, will be made available based on the average Day Ahead Market (DAM) wholesale electricity price and will be the same across all technologies.
2. Additional supports will be offered for new micro-generation technologies installed after June 30th 2020 through a fixed Clean Export Premium Tariff rate each for domestic and non-domestic consumers for the excess electricity exported to the grid.
Applicants wishing to avail of the CEP will need to meet a minimum post-works BER requirement in order to ensure an energy efficiency first principle is achieved. Occupied buildings will need to achieve a BER C rating. The minimum BER rating for the MSS will be increased over time to align with other Government energy efficiency retrofit programmes.
minnow wrote: » According to this tweet the maximum domestic system for FIT is only 3kW. That's very low.