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This is something every single farmer in Canada and the World should watch!

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    #81
    Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
    Mine produce 35000 kwh per year which is on average what our farm uses. Saving us from paying Sask power and all carbon tax free. Over their 25-30 year lifetime the estimated cost of each kwh is about 8 cents. Sask Power is currently charging about 15 cents. And their rates will continue to rise.

    The 35,000 kwh I produce displace the 35,000 kwh that would have come from fossil fuels reducing carbon emissions.
    I opened my Sask Power statement shortly after reading this.
    I can see we used about that 35,000 Kwh in only the 2 bills that come in the cold part of the year.
    I must need about twice as many solar panels as you have?
    Can I still get the same deal as you have with Sask Power?
    If you could post up a few photos of your installation it sure would make it easier to see what is needed to zero my power costs.
    Thanks for your help.
    Last edited by shtferbrains; Jan 18, 2024, 12:01.

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      #82
      Oh never, SHHH, it's a secret

      Comment


        #83
        Shite are you using 17500 kwh per month? What are you using it for for? You could really use a solar PV system to cover a lot of that very high farm usage!

        Moving on, summer demand peaks are increasing along with winter peaks. And you dont need to cover all demand with intermiittent renewables to gain all the benefits. Its not one or the other! Especially since Canada already has a very large amount of renewable hydro.

        Electrification of many things demands more electricity so you don't need to worry about having too much low cost electricity from renewable sources.

        We are going to need multiple sources and flexibility to lower carbon emissions.

        The infinite low cost supply of renewable energy from the sun and wind are driving mass amounts of energy investment in many parts of the world.

        Most Canadian provinces are investing in renewable sources because they are the lowest cost way to increase zero emission supplies.
        Last edited by chuckChuck; Jan 22, 2024, 08:01.

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          #84
          Just build some new Nuclear power plants and throw the solar and wind Bullshit in the Dumpster. Its a joke. Today with clouds and a snow storm, Zero producing power from wind because its To fast for windmills and to cloudy for solar. Stupid Liberals never good at math. Well they cant count the dollars on their rebates from Ottawa. Only way it works if feds give money to the useless.

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            #85
            Exactly, my thoughts as well, just wait till there mounds of solar panels and pieces of windmills that can’t be recycled before the experts might see the light.

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              #86
              exactly but i believe its all about control and electric is easy for gov to control.

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                #87
                Snow is building in the fields but it's snow and one good rain in spring does more. Maps show that a lot of Canada is dry they are worried about blowing dirt. We direct seed as long as we have some kind of stubble it is not happening. This is the misinformation going on.

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                  #88
                  No snow banks here, nothing to ridge with.

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                    #89
                    Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                    Shite are you using 17500 kwh per month? What are you using it for for? You could really use a solar PV system to cover a lot of that very high farm usage.
                    We use that amount every 3 months on the bills from the winter. Don't your farm power bills come quarterly?
                    If you have panels for 35,000 Kwt/yr how big of a system do I need to cover 50,000Kwt?
                    What kind of government subsidies can I expect and can I get the same deal as you for feeding most of the power to the grid in the summer and taking it out in the winter when I will produce very little?
                    How far from the meter are your panels?

                    If you can post up a few pics it would be easier for me to visualize what I need.

                    Comment


                      #90
                      Ask any solar company these questions because there are lots of variables depending on where you live.

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