An annual energy bill for a typical household will fall to £1,923 in October under regulator Ofgem’s new price cap.
I honestly think it’s appalling that they’re continuing to let these energy providers make obscene profits from us.
An annual energy bill for a typical household will fall to £1,923 in October under regulator Ofgem’s new price cap.
I honestly think it’s appalling that they’re continuing to let these energy providers make obscene profits from us.
I explicitly covered this in my 3rd comment - quoted below.
And yet you’re still wrong… The prices are part of the contract.
The increased capex and opex is making it economically unviable
https://www.rigzone.com/news/wire/14gw_wind_project_in_uk_cancelled_as_costs_soared-20-jul-2023-173391-article/
My good fellow, if you believe that cap and floor contracts somehow disproves my point, then you really do need to go back and re-read what I’ve been saying all along, not just what you think I’ve been saying.
For the final, final time:
Again:
I will only reply if your next comment actually brings something new to the conversation.
You’re talking about existing infrastructure, I’m talking about net new capex, so we’re talking at cross purposes and it’s dull
Cya
@hellothere
Definitely for baseload generators. Perhaps slightly different for peaking generators etc. Average for the sort of units you propose to sell, I guess.
This is a fair point - peaking is more complex, especially if we’re considering batteries where their generation cost is going to include probabilistic opportunity costs - ie how confident are they that the price won’t fall further and/or if this is the peak of the spot and best time to sell.
But yes, over the decades you’d be looking to run to utility for, you’re looking at blended averages to calculate the return.