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jacquelyn sauriol's avatar

Thank you for this article, much needed. After all the fires recently, I won't even get in one of those EV cars. A local grocery store (New Seasons) put in a few charging stations 6 months ago, (near the stores loading dock, which make it really hard for regular trucks to deliver food to the loading dock) but the charging stations are still surrounded by yellow tape. The power demands simply cannot be met, is my guess. In a similar vein, remember when they said computers would save paper? Nobody asked, at what cost? We are so very gullable as a species, generally.

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T. Paine Redux's avatar

A question (and some comments I suppose). I live in central NH and consider myself pretty darn conservative. Would never buy an EV nor do I subscribe to progressive thought. However, I do have rooftop solar panels. Purchased them and understand I’ll get a 30% credit on my taxes so in that sense I’m being subsidized. Otherwise, I’m paying out of pocket for them (I don’t rent or whatever they call it). The way I see net metering here is - If I produce more sun power than I use electricity (I do), then that gets put back “into the system” and is used. The power company credits me with a certain portion back, not the full KWh amount. This is a bad thing???

I’ve never been very quick off the mark financially and I’m not seeking to screw my neighbor but...other than the 30% credit and the eventual disposal issue, the manner that these panels were made, etc I don’t see rooftop solar as an evil.

Happy for any decent feedback. Thanks and happy Thanksgiving to all out there.

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