In July 2015, the City of Sydney, Total Environment Centre
and NSW Property Council proposed the Local Generation Network Credit rule
change. This would have required network businesses to pay a credit for
electricity exported into the distribution grid – that is, close to where it is
actually consumed.
This is different to the credit (known as a “feed-in
tariff”, or FIT) paid by electricity retailers for solar households that export
power, which reflects the energy value of the solar rather than any network
value. FITs are a fixed payment for the amount of power exported with no
variation for the time of day. In most states, retailer FITs have replaced
generous mandatory FITs set by state governments, and usually have an upper
limit on system size somewhere between 5 and 100 kilowatts.
The network rule change would have been a small but crucial
step towards recognising that in the future electricity will flow both to and
from consumers, as more and more individuals, communities and businesses
install their own generation.
Read the piece by the Research Director, Institute for Sustainable Futures at Sydney’s University of Technology, Jay Rutovitz, on The Conversation - “The A$1.2 billion saving Australia’s electricity rule-maker just knocked back.”
No comments:
Post a Comment