Friday, July 25, 2008

Electric Rates to Go Up 15%!

I knew PG&E was planning to raise our electric rates by 5% in October, but now it turns out that is just part one. Part two is another 10% increase in January! That is a significant increase by any standard, but an unfortunate byproduct of the dependence upon natural gas and oil to generate electricity for those without clean solar power.

A 15% rise in electric rates translates to $20 or more for many families per month. Conversely, a family with solar power will be nowhere near as affected by utility company rate increases because of their decision to own rather than rent the majority of their power needs.

As electric rates climb, solar power becomes more and more practical and provides a higher, faster, return on investment. Families who currently use enough electricity to qualify for the higher rate tiers-pretty much anybody paying $150 or more per month-are actually paying more per kilowatt hour for a good percentage of their power than if they had invested in solar power. These higher rate tiers will continue to increase while solar system owners will have locked in their electric power costs for decades to come. For my wife and I, it's good to know there's one monthly expense we have some control over longterm.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Living With Solar--PG&E Owes Me Money

It's been a couple of months since I last blogged. Summer is here and so are peak time power rates. This means that PG&E pays three times as much for the power generated on our roof. May's electric bill was -$33.00, June, -$44.00! Yes, that's minus 33 and 44 dollars and this will continue throughout the summer!

We had estimated that at the end of our first year "true up" period with PG&E, we would owe about $600.00, based upon using 1000Kwh per month. However, after changing to CFL bulbs and being more aware of conserving electricity due to going solar, we have reduced our power consumption to 700Kwh hours per month. Bottom line is we expect to pay around $200 or less to PG&E for the whole year's electric bill! $200 is a whole lot better than the $2664.00 we used to pay annually to rent our electricity instead of own it. Multiply that savings over 30 or more years that our solar system will be generating clean power, even if utility rates stayed the same, and this adds up to serious savings!

Natural gas prices have climbed from $1.10 to $1.61 per therm from January to June, this is where most people's electricity comes from, so PG&E will be raising electric rates in October. We've already seen natural gas bills rise, just like gasoline keeps doing almost daily.

Electric rate hikes will have very little impact on our bill for the next 30+ years. When we buy our first electric car in a couple of years, charged by our solar system, we won't have to worry about ridiculous gas prices as much either. (Our solar system already recharges our Duffy electric boat.)

Meanwhile, in my neighborhood, besides one neighbor who went solar during our community program, I keep seeing people put in expensive paver driveways, new grass, fancy front doors and copper rain gutters, all of which look great, but these are often the same folks whose first question about solar power is, "what is the ROI?" I think I can safely say a lot better than that new driveway!