Anonymous wrote:PERTH, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Australia will offer at least three hours of free solar power every day to households including those without solar panels under an energy-saving programme that is expected to go live in 2026, energy minister Chris Bowen said on Tuesday.
The Solar Sharer programme will begin in the states of New South Wales and South Australia as well as southeast Queensland before it is expanded elsewhere
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/australia-offer-three-hours-free-solar-per-day-millions-2025-11-04/
Australia generates too much electricity during peak times for solar. The huge increase in residential solar installations has created a record drop in demand during peak generation times. They hope this will shift how residential power use during the day.
Unlike here where we have to pay for data centers!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, we should do this in Minnesota and North Dakota…
I'm pretty sure those places don't get nearly as much sun as Australia. Solar electricity would be much more expensive there. Just calculating daylight hours. Not to mention it actually rains there. But, hey if you're thinking it's just useless land, go for it.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, we should do this in Minnesota and North Dakota…
Anonymous wrote:Wow, we should do this in Minnesota and North Dakota…
Anonymous wrote:Wow, we should do this in Minnesota and North Dakota…
Anonymous wrote:Wow, we should do this in Minnesota and North Dakota…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, we should do this in Minnesota and North Dakota…
Glad you like being taxed with higher electricity cost for data centers. Guess the data center millionaires and billionaires can’t pay for this themselves? Why do data centers pay 1/2 of what residential use pay?
Anonymous wrote:Wow, we should do this in Minnesota and North Dakota…
PERTH, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Australia will offer at least three hours of free solar power every day to households including those without solar panels under an energy-saving programme that is expected to go live in 2026, energy minister Chris Bowen said on Tuesday.
The Solar Sharer programme will begin in the states of New South Wales and South Australia as well as southeast Queensland before it is expanded elsewhere