idontneedfame
idontneedfame t1_j6wng74 wrote
Reply to comment by imhere4themcomments in No coal comeback: Europe’s renewable energy transition is in hyperdrive by Straight_Ad2258
well, if you have a "loan on renewables", you won't be paying money towards electricity production so you could use the money you saved to pay off your bank.
Neglectable in this case means that your long-term cost of conventional energy consumption is (very roughly) the same (give or take a few hundred over your lifetime, there are calulators online) as the cost of installing your own pv system.
if you want go to all the way and calculate the total economic value (think energy independency, avoided CO2 emissions, cleaner air, a future for your kids etc) producing your own power will be a lot cheaper.
idontneedfame t1_j6wcagc wrote
Reply to comment by imhere4themcomments in No coal comeback: Europe’s renewable energy transition is in hyperdrive by Straight_Ad2258
According to Wikipedia, it's onshore wind. The large up front investments are true and the amortization period is longer than for fossil fuels but compared to the societal and long term/eternal costs of using fossil fuels and nuclear energy, the costs are neglectable
idontneedfame t1_j6s0r3s wrote
Reply to comment by generic-web-user in No coal comeback: Europe’s renewable energy transition is in hyperdrive by Straight_Ad2258
renewable energy is cheaper to produce so the free market will lead to lower costs for everyone unless the free market isn't actually free because companies are conspiring against consumers to siphon off their money. well, good luck
idontneedfame t1_j6wv8iu wrote
Reply to comment by imhere4themcomments in No coal comeback: Europe’s renewable energy transition is in hyperdrive by Straight_Ad2258
you're right, this is obviously only something for people privileged enough to have their own house, good credit etc.