No cargo bike with anti-nuclear weapon stickers
Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 4:50 am
The storage is used when more is generated than is used. In other words: what you have left. Unless of course you deliver it back to the grid, which is currently the cheapest in the Netherlands (see also the paragraph Netting).
In the Netherlands, there are already a number of consumers who have a SolarWatt installation. The profile of these users is not the hippie consumer, but the early adopters and/or gadget lovers. These early adopters are of course not a very large target group and not representative of the market. They accept a higher price or investments and have an open mind . They may be more tolerant of disruptions, but do want certainty with regard to the energy supply. With the existing energy companies, you know what you have and disruptions are incidents.
But how do you get Dutch consumers to switch to high school senior mailing list solar energy on a large scale, so that we have a realistic chance of achieving targets?
It could be a statement by Herman Finkers:
I would like to save the Earth, but it shouldn't cost me anything (not too much).”
Investments of EUR 10,000 in solar panels and storage capacity are not easy for many people, let alone the fact that in the Netherlands we have both rental and owner-occupied homes.
In addition, there is of course the transition from gas for cooking and heating to electricity. This also requires an investment that could be spread out substantially, but then over a long period. Solar panels and storage will last 20 to 30 years. An electric heating boiler also has a similar economic lifespan.
What is the role of the government?
If we assume for a moment that the message to switch to clean energy is one that we endorse (see also the formation and the positions of the parties): how can a government play a catalytic role.
In the Netherlands, there are already a number of consumers who have a SolarWatt installation. The profile of these users is not the hippie consumer, but the early adopters and/or gadget lovers. These early adopters are of course not a very large target group and not representative of the market. They accept a higher price or investments and have an open mind . They may be more tolerant of disruptions, but do want certainty with regard to the energy supply. With the existing energy companies, you know what you have and disruptions are incidents.
But how do you get Dutch consumers to switch to high school senior mailing list solar energy on a large scale, so that we have a realistic chance of achieving targets?
It could be a statement by Herman Finkers:
I would like to save the Earth, but it shouldn't cost me anything (not too much).”
Investments of EUR 10,000 in solar panels and storage capacity are not easy for many people, let alone the fact that in the Netherlands we have both rental and owner-occupied homes.
In addition, there is of course the transition from gas for cooking and heating to electricity. This also requires an investment that could be spread out substantially, but then over a long period. Solar panels and storage will last 20 to 30 years. An electric heating boiler also has a similar economic lifespan.
What is the role of the government?
If we assume for a moment that the message to switch to clean energy is one that we endorse (see also the formation and the positions of the parties): how can a government play a catalytic role.