Sentences with phrase «surplus kilowatt hours»

Not exact matches

The home generated a surplus 491 kilowatt hours of energy in its first year of operation, according to a report on the agency's Net - Zero Energy Residential Test Facility released earlier this month.
New grid - connected residential solar energy customers that install a solar system in a three year transition period will receive credits of 9.2 cents per kilowatt - hour for the surplus electrical energy they dispatch to Rock Mountain Power's grid.
So if you have generated surplus kWh (kilowatt hours) they will vanish at the end of each 12 monthly cycle.
So if you have generated surplus kWh (kilowatt hours) they will turn into $ $ at the end of each 12 monthly cycle.
Net metering means that for every unit of surplus solar generation (kWh) during the day you effectively get a credit for a kilowatt hour (kWh) of power purchased from the grid at another time.
This market would allow Ontario businesses and residents to access surplus clean power at the wholesale market price of less than two cents per kilowatt - hour (KWh), which could displace the use of fossil fuels by using things like dual fuel (gas and electric) water heaters, and by producing emission - free hydrogen fuel.
Net metering means that for every unit of surplus solar generation generated during the day you effectively get a credit for that kilowatt hour of power purchased from the grid at another time.
Net metering means that for every unit of surplus solar generation generated during the day you effectively get a credit for a kilowatt hour of power purchased from the grid at another time.
Net metering for homeowners in Louisiana means that for every unit of surplus solar generated during the day you effectively get a credit for half a kilowatt hour of power purchased from the grid at another time.
The boat produced a reported 2,000 kilowatt - hours of solar energy that powered electric motors with surplus energy stored in batteries.
Germany built its solar program with a pricing mechanism called feed - in tariffs, in which money collected from ratepayers is used to buy surplus power from owners of rooftop photovoltaic arrays at a guaranteed price per kilowatt - hour.
The utility wants to overhaul a pricing rule that allows owners of rooftop solar systems to sell the surplus electricity they generate to Duke at 11 cents per kilowatt - hour, the retail bundled rate.
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