#4029
Rematog
Participant

Aeronaut,

Very interesting analysis. Now your getting a feel for “obligation to serve”, which is what a regulated utility has to it’s customers (the utility takes on this duty in exchange for the regualated monopoly status).

Not mentioned in this is the added cost per house to “own” their own power supply. If the FF module, installed on site, costs $1,000K, and the distribution system to these 100 homes costs $500K to install, that adds $15k to the construciton cost of each of these 100 homes.

I went back to a cost of power I’d work up in an old post, and maintenance for a FF module (1 day every 4 weeks + 2 weeks/year, I’d be glad to post if you’d like) @$119,240/year. Now, as this is being done in field, rather than a centralized plant site, multiply this by 25% (time to drive to site each day, cost of vehiles, and crafts being less well supervised) = $149,000 per year / 100 homes = $1,490/year. Plus, you have to have a back-up power supply (the Grid?) for those 24 days per year. (12 of the days would only have about 8 hrs down time so it works out to about 96% availablility, not a bad number at all).

With a cost of money of 6%, the capital investment costs + maintenance costs: $15K@6%= $900 + $1,500 maint = $2,400/yr or $200 Month.

While not a huge electric bill, this does not seem to me to be the “cheap power” the board is assuming.

WHY?

Because, the 5MW module is being sized for peak load which was done so it could be DEDICATED to a DISTRUBUTED location. The grid allows the central station to keep it’s units much more evenly loaded, so they actually generate a much larger percentage of their rated capacity.

So, Aeronaut, your example, to me, provides another arguement against distributed generation. (and I’ll not even discuss the “keep the kids from jumping the fence” safety issue.)

Rematog