Author Topic: Electricity getting very expensive in the Workshop  (Read 7857 times)

Offline Pete49

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Re: Electricity getting very expensive in the Workshop
« Reply #50 on: May 14, 2022, 10:51:42 PM »
At the moment wind power is the biggest contributor at 12.95 GW, solar is 2.55 GW. Nuclear is 5.25 GW.

http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/index.php

I don't dispute that, it's the subsides need to be taken away to show the true cost of generation. It's the subsidies that increase the costs.
oops..........oh no.........blast now I need to redo it

Offline philf

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Re: Electricity getting very expensive in the Workshop
« Reply #51 on: May 15, 2022, 03:37:29 AM »
At the moment wind power is the biggest contributor at 12.95 GW, solar is 2.55 GW. Nuclear is 5.25 GW.

http://www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/index.php

I don't dispute that, it's the subsides need to be taken away to show the true cost of generation. It's the subsidies that increase the costs.

Hi Pete,

I was only pointing out that it's oil & gas that has rocketed in price. As far as I'm aware wind and sunshine are still free!

I'm involved in a small scale hydro project and we're locked into a contract which sets the price of the electricity we generate far below the current (no pun intended) market price.

Cheers.

Phil.
Phil Fern
Location: Marple, Cheshire

Offline Noitoen

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Re: Electricity getting very expensive in the Workshop
« Reply #52 on: July 07, 2022, 04:30:32 PM »
Energy prices for industrial use in Portugal change on a daily bases. The price for "tomorrow" is based on the price of the fuel of the last source that was used "today". Most of the day might be supplied by solar, wind or hydro but if gas must be used to top up the grid, the price reference for the "tomorrow" energy is based 100% on the gas price of today. At our plant there have been days that the price goes to 0.7€/kwh. No wonder that power companies show huge profits.

Household power costs on the other end have been kept stable at around 0.19€/kwh and since the maximum limit imposed on the gas prices, this should drop to around 0.17€.

Offline hanermo

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Re: Electricity getting very expensive in the Workshop
« Reply #53 on: August 04, 2022, 01:21:13 PM »
We got our 10 kW solar PV array running 2 weeks ago.
Rooftop.

Producing about 4x more power than we use, and mostly a lot of extra power we will be using shortly for "hotel loads".

Grid power cost is up 2-3-4x in finland and spain, depending on what lies--statistics you use.

A pretty large 3-phase 10 kW system costs about 7k€, net, to me.
Payback is 18 months, or so.
And I get free power for AC in the house and shop, and for 2 spas, and for heating a swimming pool.

Offline vtsteam

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Re: Electricity getting very expensive in the Workshop
« Reply #54 on: August 05, 2022, 01:50:19 PM »
 :worthless:
I love it when a Plan B comes together!
Steve
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4sDubB0-REg

Offline WeldingRod

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Re: Electricity getting very expensive in the Workshop
« Reply #55 on: August 07, 2022, 09:59:04 AM »
Dang!  18 month pay back!  On something that last 20 years?!?!  OMG!

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Offline hanermo

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Re: Electricity getting very expensive in the Workshop
« Reply #56 on: August 22, 2022, 05:51:18 AM »
To further ...
Plan is to install a heat pump of about 16-20 kW, air-water, as they can have an efficiency in the 5.8 COP level.
This means you get 5.8 times the heat vs the power you put in.

So a 4 kW max electrical load delivers upto 20 kW of heating / cooling.
I will keep the current oil heating system, but simply not use.

The oil bill last year was 3000 €, which will drop to essentially zero.
As an extra, I will get air-con throughout the very large 400m2 house and shop.
Estimated cost is around 8-10k€, for 14 fan-coil units (replace radiators).
Plus about 800 € in work hours.
Iīm a contractor and these are my own import materials costs.

A commercial air-conditioning install of 20 kW would cost over 20 k€ (10-12 splits, give or take).

And because of the PV array, heating and aircon will be free, for now (30 years).
Saving about 3500€ in electric bills, and 3000 € in heating bills, per year.
And a 1000€ per year subsidy from the gov. for 4 years.