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Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
Grumpy Old Nasho replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
Yeah I'll have to get a generator and some solar panels, the mains power supply has proven to be unreliable and too costly. There's one more thing I can try. My provider (AGL) suggests on my bill, to change my plan, so I'll research that and see what I come up with. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
facthunter replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
You'd be Mad to go onto the grid and why would they want you as a customer IF you don't use Much Power? Have you got enough Power to weld? 240 V is a dangerous voltage. 415 more so. Make sure your compressor unloads for starting or the genset might struggle. Some of those early gensets were 36 V DC. Pretty useless today. Maybe for safety? Nev -
In THIS case it's against the LAW.. Generally the Boss can do what he Likes in Industry unless a work contract says otherwise. Like Pilot seniority lists. Nev
- Today
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Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
onetrack replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
I've got a small industrial block in a small country town, in the Wheatbelt of W.A., about 130kms NNE of Perth. Despite having a 3 phase powerline only 50M away at a T-junction, the power has never been supplied to my block. The worst part is - if I want mains power, I have to submit a usage plan, pay $450 application fee to Western Power, plus about another $1300 for them to investigate, doing engineering studies, and provide me with a quote for running mains power to my property. It's highly likely that quote will come in anywhere between $10,000 to $20,000, just to run the powerline 50M to my property. Such are the joys of our W.A. mains power supply being a Govt-owned monopoly. And if I reject their quote as too costly, I lose my $450 application fee. If I go ahead with the proposal, I'm then looking at a monthly supply charge plus power usage costs. Likely to be at least $30-$50 a month bare minimum. To top it all, the area suffers from frequent blackouts - as a result of a long power line supply. Apparently some of those blackouts have lasted for up to a week. Accordingly, I bought two excellent condition small diesel gensets - one single phase 6KVA, and one 3 phase 19KVA. They cost me less than $5000 in total. I use about 20L of fuel a month, probably less than the cost of the supply charge for mains power. I can run them when I want, and not run them, if I don't need the power. I'm shortly going to invest in a solar and battery setup, utilising used solar panels and used lead acid batteries. I reckon that setup will cost me no more than a couple of thousand dollars. That will then give me a constant power source for fridges and lights, and if I want to do some welding, grinding, tyre changing, or run my big air compressor, I fire up the gensets for the necessary period required. You have a multitude of options in todays world, unlike people in the fifties. But even back then, most rural people had small Dunlite gensets and batteries - and Dunlite even built small Wind turbines, which turbines are still sought after today for their durability. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
octave replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
The good thing about today is that modern technology supersedes candles, etc. Modern LED lighting, cheap solar panels, lower cost batteries mean that even without a full-on rooftop system with battery, you can cobble together quite a good backup power system. Action is better than whinging. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
Grumpy Old Nasho replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
Is that an insult? Are you getting me mixed up with someone else? The topic is Solar/Wind power and what it's costing us. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
Grumpy Old Nasho replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
No, I'm in Mid-West NSW, with a supply of candles in my pantry. They get used at a rapid rate because four are used at a time for lengthy outages. Memories come flooding back how my Grandmother, living by herself, in the fifties, without electricity, just candles after sunset in the evenings. And here I am, living the same way on many occasions, in 2026 modernity. Although, now I have small portable LED lights as well as candles. -
Nev - Nothing new about nepotism in politics, and private industry is worse.
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Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
Siso replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
Solar and wind is the cheapest form of electricity but it also needs a lot of backup, extra transmission, storage and artificial inertia which makes the whole package expensive. Snowy 2 was quoted at $4B currently at $12B and they are talking $20B. I know a lot of you won't like the host(some of his views are a bit out there) but his guest has a pretty good explanation of what is really happening. it can be seen by those inside the industry as well. -
She's given her daughter a taxpayer funded job that May draw the crabs. The "Perils of Pauline"? Nev
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Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
facthunter replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
General statement.....36 cents gives you a Horsepower for 1.25 hours & about $300 per annum keeps you connected. Australia is a Big Place with a lot of wide open spaces to service. Stop whingeing and get on with your life. There's a lot worse things going on out there to be concerned about. Nev -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
onetrack replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
Your power supply reliability is largely determined by the distance your power lines cover to get the power to you - and the terrain. If you choose to live in remote mountainous, or even hilly terrain, expect more blackouts than people in closer to the power generation facilities and in open, more level terrain. Living in Central Perth, I have experienced so few blackouts, it's hard to recall when I last had one. Mostly any blackouts happen after a long dry Summer and dust and salt build up on powerline insulators. Then we get a very moist morning or even a tiny amount of rain, not enough to wash the insulators, and we have "flashovers", where the insulators fail to do their job and the power supply shorts out. A lot of times, flashovers also cause pole crossbar fires, and that makes things even worse. We pay 32c a unit and a $1.16 a day supply charge. 45% of our bill goes to the company that operated, and maintains and manages our power network - Western Power. WP manage over $30 billion worth of assets, including 42,000 transmission towers and 758,000+ distribution poles. Our system is called the South West Interconnected System (SWIS) and it is the biggest totally isolated network in the world, and it covers the most populous areas of S.W. W.A. Currently we have only 3 coal fired generators left supplying our power, and they are slated to close in 2027, 2029 and 2030. Those dates may be extended a little. Those 3 coal fired generators are the most costly power generation in W.A. and have been losing money hand over fist for years. Failed refurbishment of one coal-fired power station here, cost taxpayers over $300M, to get nothing in return, except abandonment of the project, as the power station corrosion problems got bigger and bigger as the project proceeded. So there's nothing cheap about coal-fired power here in the West. We rely on natural gas power generation (15% of W.A.'s natural gas supplies are reserved for W.A. consumers and businesses), solar, wind, and now big batteries. By 2030, we will be running on solar, wind, big batteries, and minimal natural gas power generation. Solar power generation via household roofs in W.A. is a massive source of W.A.'s energy, and it is being harnessed via those big batteries. -
Unless some thing effective is done about it, it will only get worse. Nev
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The worst I've seen on FB is the fake story and photo about Pauline Hanson collapsing in Parliament. The scum producing this stuff really should be hunted down and exposed - and Zuckerberg and his company assist in promoting the rubbish, thus placing him, and Meta, and the scammers, all in the same information sewerage tank.
- Yesterday
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The climate change debate continues.
facthunter replied to Phil Perry's topic in Science and Technology
Talk to Scotty. Nev -
Avoid Mushroom Clouds. Nev
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The climate change debate continues.
nomadpete replied to Phil Perry's topic in Science and Technology
Sir, sir! Please tell me how to digitally migrate away from a physical threat? Does A.I. now have the power to teleport? Need to know as I have holidays coming up. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
nomadpete replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
I note that although the recent official graphs show a slight decrease in domestic electricity consumption, I think they cannot measure most of the locally consumed rootop solar, so they miss that. In my case, my solar has logged as much power as my street meter consumption, but my bill only showed a third of that going back into the grid. So nationally, average household power consumption has increased steadily over the years. Of course bills go up. Consumer lifestyle is the real reason for the increased power bills. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
old man emu replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
Talking about building new coal generators. How many billions of dollars would it cost to build the building on a previously undeveloped area of land? Leave out the cost of installing and commsiioning the generating components of a power station. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
nomadpete replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
Just doing a 'back of the napkin' calc.... Average Australian wage is circa $100k per annum. Say 30% income tax, leaves $70k real income. My power bill is about $1300 per annum. Isn't that 1.8% of wages going on electricity? Even if the government (who incidentally don't own the power system anymore) make electricity free it hardly impacts the overall cost of living. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
nomadpete replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
It might be time to investigate the purchase of a UPS for the CPAP? -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
pmccarthy replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
Then cost of domestic electricity is the monthly bill, not the unit rate. To suggest otherwise is misleading. As a consumer I don’t care if a big part of my monthly bill is now going to build power lines across paddocks, or whatever. Just the total. And yes, I have rooftop solar. The blackouts today are not as long as they were a few years ago. But even a short blackout is annoying when you have to reset several clocks in modern devices like the oven. And it is very annoying when your CPAP stops in the middle of the night and you wake up gasping for air. -
Why is inexpensive electricity so expensive?
Jerry_Atrick replied to Grumpy Old Nasho's topic in Science and Technology
It was cheap and reliable, but so were model T Fords in their time. Times and technology has moved on, and, sadly for some, the alternatives are cheaper, more reliable, require much less maintenance, and produce less emissions to boot. Model T fords in today's money were about USD $15000 (AUD$21,000). For $19,000 you can get small hatch backs.. now, who is going to buy a car to the Model T spec for $21,000 when you can have the alternatives cheaper? Not too many takers, I would think. Yes, there has to be an investment to bring it on to critical mass, just like there was an investment in coal stations. Remember, all of Australia's power generation was originally government owned because of the investments required - before the governments sold the family silver. I guess candles and horses weren't enough. It's not woke, it's economics - pure and simple. I recall plenty of blackouts as a kid... when it was virtually all coal. And a hell of a lot less demand than today - no air conditoners and the like fo us commoners. When I worked in the industry, the maintenance of coal plants was horrendous compared to even nuclear (nuclear was more expensive due to the standards, not the actual work that had to be done). We live in thereal world, with real data, not some nostalgiv throwback.
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