freediver wrote on Jan 18
th, 2009 at 4:22pm:
I suspect that even if you ignore the costly government handout and factor in the money you save by producing your own electricity, you could make a bigger dent in your carbon footprint by purchasing green energy with your out-of-pocket expense for panels. Obviously there will be even cheaper ways to reduce your carbon footprint by reducing electricity consumption. Panels only appeal to people because they get to see something being built in their own backyard. Simply paying the money for green energy does not give the same warm glow because you don't see the result.
I call it 'ecoparasitology', where you suck the blood out of your community by first injecting a clever little green anaesthetic.
FD, I guess it's a question of who do you trust. If the Petroleum companies can pull a swiftie by giving us ethanol bought from China on the spot market that is manufactured from Natural Gas, what is the Clean Energy subsidy being used for?
I pay the extra for clean energy, but do I think that it's being apportioned to pay for a clean source of energy? No. I suspect that it may be going to some kind of slush fund for whatever passes as clean energy research, including some half-hearted sequestration projects that don't have a snowflakes chance in hell of working out.
The overheads may be higher for PV panels, but at least the householder can see and measure the tangible benefit for themselves. The real benefit is that it generates interest in sustainable energy production.
Apart from any of that, it's the only real alternative in some parts of the bush. When you're faced with a $45,000 connection charge to be part of the grid, a stand alone Solar PV system is the only real alternative if you want to be part of the 21st Century. Many people are living in the bush and teleworking. I know a design engineer who lives just North of Alice Springs. He still has to travel from time to time, but his projects are on both coasts and in SE Asia, so his location is sometimes an advantage.
I'm not sure if you live in Qld or not, but have you tried to buy Clean Energy lately? The best you can buy is 10% of your total. I think it's the same in NSW.