Comment by hamdingers
Comment by hamdingers 10 hours ago
> The problem is when there are long stretches of little to no power generation. Fully covering those gaps with batteries would require very large (and costly) storage.
Perhaps local solar installations could be incentivized to include their own smaller scale storage...
California has done this with their latest version of net metering for residenial solar, NEM 3.
It makes solar a very financially unattractive option unless there's storage attached to the system, and has drastically reduced the rate of residential solar deployment.
NEM3 was justified under the proposition that lower-income households were "funding" the higher income households to get solar. So as solar finally gets cheap enough for the lower income households, they changed the rules again so that only those rich enough to afford batteries and solar can save money.
NEM3 has a few nice things about it when looked at narrowly, but overall seems pretty disastrous for the state.