I am sympathetic to the local proprietor thing, I go to the market, buy at
the little hardware store, the local coffee shop.  But I think many
installers are less than efficient (there is a national effort to reduce
soft costs).  Why does it take a week and 5 trips by the main crew and a
number of other visits to make a straightforward install happen?   I got
very good workmanship, but I was really scratching my head after 3 days.  I
think dealing with the utilities adds a layer that the installer has to
manage - which is not subject to competition.  Does Duke power care if the
installer has to have two on staff to call them and write emails?

Maybe Solarcity and other trickier methods can be the competition to drive
the cost down.  If a local supplier is not being a good competitor then
maybe they should not be as successful as they are now.


On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 9:55 AM, Zeke Yewdall <[email protected]> wrote:

> In Colorado, they only work with one of the utilities here (the one with
> some minimal incentives).  They typically won't work with any of the other
> utilities that don't offer incentives, or who have a limited pool of
> incentives.  We do a lot of work with the other utilities, consequently :)
>
> I have mixed feelings about them.  Opening up access to solar to people
> without the up front cash is good... but the number of local companies that
> have gone under due to low cost leases being offered by solar city (and a
> few others), and the number of orphaned PV systems with no warrantee any
> more is not good.
>
> Z
>
>
> On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 7:41 AM, Rick Beebe via EV <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> I have 9.3kw of SolarCity cells on my house using their Power Purchase
>> Agreement (PPA) and they've been great to work with. With a PPA I
>> basically agreed to buy all the electricity the panels produce. They
>> would have installed it with absolutely no money out of my pocket but I
>> elected to pay them $1000 to lock my rate in for 20 years. Payback was
>> four years based on historical electric company rate changes but they
>> raised it 15% this past January so my payback will be even quicker.
>>
>> They're not in every state, though, and I suspect that the ones they are
>> in are the ones with the best state incentives.
>>
>> --Rick
>>
>> On 06/29/2014 04:01 PM, Michael Ross via EV wrote:
>> >
>> > I am interested in Solarcity.  They offer a way for people with less
>> funds
>> > and credit to get solar on their house.  But, I have not figured out
>> quite
>> > how they operate in all the various situations that people find
>> themselves
>> > in vis a vis their utility and local government.
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>


-- 
Put this question to yourself: should I use everyone else to attain
happiness, or should I help others gain happiness?
*Dalai Lama *

Tell me what it is you plan to do
With your one wild and precious life?
Mary Oliver, "The summer day."

To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk.
Thomas A. Edison
<http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/t/thomasaed125362.html>

A public-opinion poll is no substitute for thought.
*Warren Buffet*

Michael E. Ross
(919) 550-2430 Land
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(919) 513-0418 Desk

[email protected]
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