It’s fantastic that everyone here is sharing articles and information. What I really, really want to figure out is how to adapt my home both for efficiency and alternative energy sources. I know that people will suggest that we add more insulation to our house, add a ground-source heat pump, and so on… These are all great ideas, but I’m trying to put them all together and it always seems to require a bespoke solution. Of course every situation and geographical location are different. But there should still be a standard for a household system, that can: accommodate solar panels and wind generators, batteries (a little, or a lot), and connection to the grid (or not). Ontario, Canada had a generous Feed In Tariff (FIT) program that paid generous amounts for energy fed into the grid by residential solar. I was not in a position to take advantage of this AND I wanted the option to first charge local batteries before selling the surplus to the grid. We need better off-the-shelf solutions for people that want to power their homes with renewables while remaining connected to the grid without each person needing to explore individual solutions.

  • Joël de Bruijn
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    1 month ago

    Don’t know if it’s really feasible but for scaling (just like in computing and datacentering etc) we need more standardization for a smarter grid I guess then now AND make it “Plug & Play” AND sometimes other legislation so the required expertise to install and configure comes down and you are allowed to do so in a safely manner.

    One example here in NL is HomeWizard home battery because it’s just max 800W one can just plug it in. (In order to have more in one appliance we need other compliance regulation)