Fukushima nuclear; sign a green electricity contract!

Oil, gas, coal, nuclear (PWR, EPR, hot fusion, ITER), gas and coal thermal power plants, cogeneration, tri-generation. Peakoil, depletion, economics, technologies and geopolitical strategies. Prices, pollution, economic and social costs ...
User avatar
Did67
Moderator
Moderator
posts: 20362
Registration: 20/01/08, 16:34
Location: Alsace
x 8685




by Did67 » 30/07/13, 17:40

I would have done better to take a look here before talking:

http://www.enercoop.fr/production_498.html

It is indeed a question of the "ERDF guide for connection".

The "big activists" are in fact the producers: selling PV electricity at 5 or 6 cents per Kwh (against almost 30 when you sell to ERDF - thanks to the CSPE subsidy), in effect, that means that you invests in vain.

For biogas, the price of the installation that I report elsewhere will be in memory of 17,4 cents per kWh. Again, it was simply not possible to complete the project and finance it (by 60% loan) with 5 at 6 cents.

As I presented it, it is probably only for the small hydrualique that the offer is viable (because there is no competing subsidized offer): http://enercoop.fr/index.asp?id=595

This is the case of the two producers mentioned: http://www.enercoop.fr/index.asp?id=669

The resale price to individuals is here: http://enercoop.fr/images/sites/2013_01 ... 0cours.pdf


[Let us hear:

a) I have nothing against "disinterested activism";
b) I find that the cooperative model is not used enough to create SMEs where everyone is mobilized, interested and who are structures by definition sheltered from redemptions!
c) that being said, the model such as is not "sustainable", in the sense that it can be generalized, duplicated on a large scale, and last: producers of relouvelbales energies who currently can sell at 5 or 6 cents are necessarily an ultra-minority: a few small hydropower sites; people likely to invest in PV or biomethane without considering the return on investment: patrons ???]
0 x

 


  • Similar topics
    Replies
    views
    Last message

Go back to "Fossil energies: oil, gas, coal and nuclear electricity (fission and fusion)"

Who is online ?

Users browsing this forum : No registered users and 181 guests