Ok PG&E rates, currently, are $0.21536 for up to baseline usage, $0.28478 for between 101-400% baseline, and $0.44095 beyond 400% baseline. For basically the entire coast, and I don't just mean ocean front, we have one of the lowest baseline allowances, 8.3kWh for summer and 14.9kWh for winter which is actually better since we tend to use more reef energy in the winter keeping the tank warm So for summer that's 249kWh baseline per month @ 0.21536 = $53.62, then the remaining 451-651kWh all fall in the 101-400% range @ 0.28478 so $128-313 extra. Which overall translates to $182 to 367 per month just for the tank. So yeah it can get pricey.I suspect my tank consumes somewhere in the range of 700-900 kW-hrs/month,
My uneducated opinion is fairly small rooftops, and lots of renters limit solar.Yes to a large house, although mostly because the big house came with the garage. By Midwest standards is call the yard small, although the locals disagree. While I like my green space cutting grass is a chore, not a joy.
Position is Uber ATG, so Lyft was a decent guess. They'll get me from a train station, although I don't know the details. Personally I'd rather ride my bike from the train station if that's at all practical (chronic wrist injury may prevent this).
Baseline vs non baseline rates is a new one to me, that hurts. With electric rates that high I'm surprised I didn't see more solar, or does the fog make that impractical?
Well I was trying to ease him in slowly, hitting a Texan transplant with Powerwalls before he’s even moved here is a bit much lol We still want him to come.let's not forget power walls
Seems I missed a notification or something, I didn't realize there were more replies. I'm not a native Texan, although I have come to appreciate the cheap power, and oddly cheap water (ok, high base charge, but low usage charge). Not much in the way of water changes on the reef tank, although I will probably have to cut back on changes with the freshwater tank.
The two family cars I expect to bring out are both small (NC Miatas), but very non-electric. They aren't lowered, but wondering how they'll do with ground clearance over some of those roads.
Welcome to BAR!
East bay still has relatively affordable homes, as does San Jose, but you pay for that with soul destroying commutes, as you are working in the city. The alternative, where I live, is the coast, but if you are coming from Texas you might not like the summer weather (although it is pretty much identical to the city).