Forum Discussion
pnichols
Feb 25, 2017Explorer II
MM.
Thanks much for your feedback!
We don't have electrical solar at our residence. Our electrical bills average between $300-$500 per month, due mostly because we have switched over time to a high efficiency heating/air conditioning heat pump, propane fireplace and kitchen range, and solar pool water heating.
We won't be going to rooftop electrical solar we buy or lease because we don't plan on living live here enough more years. The type of local electrical solar we would consider is leasing some of our acerage to a company for installation of a small solar farm so that they could feed the power from it into the PG&E's grid, with them making their own financial arrangemets with PG&E. This arrangement would be at no initial or long-term cost to me, but require them to pay me an agreed upon monthly land use leasing fee ... that I would then use to offset whatever my PG&E bill was each month.
Thanks much for your feedback!
We don't have electrical solar at our residence. Our electrical bills average between $300-$500 per month, due mostly because we have switched over time to a high efficiency heating/air conditioning heat pump, propane fireplace and kitchen range, and solar pool water heating.
We won't be going to rooftop electrical solar we buy or lease because we don't plan on living live here enough more years. The type of local electrical solar we would consider is leasing some of our acerage to a company for installation of a small solar farm so that they could feed the power from it into the PG&E's grid, with them making their own financial arrangemets with PG&E. This arrangement would be at no initial or long-term cost to me, but require them to pay me an agreed upon monthly land use leasing fee ... that I would then use to offset whatever my PG&E bill was each month.
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