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All these problems become solved if you have realtime market pricing.

Nobody would bother to install rooftop solar if daytime power was super cheap on every sunny day, yet expensive at night when their solar isn't working.



Wouldn't this model price out poor people? Doesn't that mean the most vulnerable people cant afford the services when they need them most, ie max hot/cold?

Changing the utility to a market sort of defeats the point of trying to optimize the utility.


It’s better to give welfare / benefits directly to help poor people in that situation, rather than fix prices to make energy appear artificially scarce during daylight and abundant at night.


On the contrary right now poor people are subsidizing fat cats like me that were early enough to have net metering


A typical user still pays the same on average in a market.

Just they might pay more in some hours and less in others.

Some market systems have gotten bad press over huge bills (eg. Texas), but that only happens when only a small chunk of users participate in the market, whilst others are on fixed pricing and therefore don't care about usage.

When everyone participates, supply and demand make sure the price never goes super high, simply because there are enough people who will turn off stuff to save money.


My solar system has a battery than smooths out the generation over a day or two so that I can satisfy my night time demand too.




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