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Don't get solar panels

The maths is simple. If you DON'T have panels, you can sell the electricity you generate to EON for 16.5p/kWh. When you later need the power, you can buy it back for 21p inc VAT (as at Aug 2025, also from EON). So it'll cost you the difference, which is 4.5p/kWh. If you DO have batteries, you'll use your own power and save that 4.5p / kWh. So a 3kW battery will save you a maximum of 13.5p a day, (assuming it gets fully charged every day, which it won't in the Winter). In one year, this works out to a maximum of £49. In reality, it'll be less than that as some Winter days generate less than 2kWh in the whole day - So let's assume batteries save you £40/year. If the battery costs £5000, they you should get your money back in around 125 years - assuming the battery lasts 125 years, which of course, it doesn't!. So if you buy the battery when you are 20, and you live to 150, and the battery is still working, you'll be in profit. Good luck with that then !!!

Comments

  • Shiftyxx
    Shiftyxx Posts: 5 Forumite
    First Anniversary First Post
    Sorry - serious typo in that. DO get solar panels. DON'T get solar batteries.
    The panels save you loads. The batteries cost you loads.
  • Shiftyxx
    Shiftyxx Posts: 5 Forumite
    First Anniversary First Post
    What I MEANT TO SAY (TO CLARIFY) IS 
    The maths is simple. If you DON'T have BATTERIES, you can sell the electricity you generate to EON for 16.5p/kWh. When you later need the power, you can buy it back for 21p inc VAT (as at Aug 2025, also from EON). So it'll cost you the difference, which is 4.5p/kWh. If you DO have BATTERIES, you'll use your own power and save that 4.5p / kWh. So a 3kW battery will save you a maximum of 13.5p a day, (assuming it gets fully charged every day, which it won't in the Winter). In one year, this works out to a maximum of £49. In reality, it'll be less than that as some Winter days generate less than 2kWh in the whole day - So let's assume batteries save you £40/year. If the battery costs £5000, they you should get your money back in around 125 years - assuming the battery lasts 125 years, which of course, it doesn't!. So if you buy the battery when you are 20, and you live to 150, and the battery is still working, you'll be in profit. Good luck with that then !!!
  • badmemory
    badmemory Posts: 9,723 Forumite
    Ninth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    I think you have seriously misunderstood.  I use around 20kWh per day some of which is gas.   I always use at least 2kWh per day from the grid as I have one large daily usage that even the solar plus the battery cannot fill.  Also any gas I may use, heating & cooking etc.  The last 3 months my supplier has been paying me.  So even if I get nothing else the other months of the year then I will be saving at least £1k a year, which is just below what I would need for the 10 year payback time they say.  But a lot of the other months will involve some saving.  Also on real winter days it is possible to fill your battery on cheap rate overnight to use during the day, but I haven't got there yet.
  • EricMears
    EricMears Posts: 3,311 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    badmemory said:
    I think you have seriously misunderstood.  I use around 20kWh per day some of which is gas.   I always use at least 2kWh per day from the grid as I have one large daily usage that even the solar plus the battery cannot fill.  Also any gas I may use, heating & cooking etc.  The last 3 months my supplier has been paying me.  So even if I get nothing else the other months of the year then I will be saving at least £1k a year, which is just below what I would need for the 10 year payback time they say.  But a lot of the other months will involve some saving.  Also on real winter days it is possible to fill your battery on cheap rate overnight to use during the day, but I haven't got there yet.
    I agree with 'badmemory' !

    I've had batteries for about a year now and the electricity I've had to import since start of this year has cost me an average of 7.8p/kWh.
    (I don't sell any electricity as I'm on deemed exports and just make sure I use as much as possible)
    NE Derbyshire.4kWp S Facing 17.5deg slope (dormer roof).24kWh of Pylontech batteries with Lux controller BEV : Hyundai Ioniq5
  • Martyn1981
    Martyn1981 Posts: 15,409 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    Shiftyxx said:
    What I MEANT TO SAY (TO CLARIFY) IS 
    The maths is simple. If you DON'T have BATTERIES, you can sell the electricity you generate to EON for 16.5p/kWh. When you later need the power, you can buy it back for 21p inc VAT (as at Aug 2025, also from EON). So it'll cost you the difference, which is 4.5p/kWh. If you DO have BATTERIES, you'll use your own power and save that 4.5p / kWh. So a 3kW battery will save you a maximum of 13.5p a day, (assuming it gets fully charged every day, which it won't in the Winter). In one year, this works out to a maximum of £49. In reality, it'll be less than that as some Winter days generate less than 2kWh in the whole day - So let's assume batteries save you £40/year. If the battery costs £5000, they you should get your money back in around 125 years - assuming the battery lasts 125 years, which of course, it doesn't!. So if you buy the battery when you are 20, and you live to 150, and the battery is still working, you'll be in profit. Good luck with that then !!!
    What about charging the battery on cheap rate in the winter to power the house, and avoid buying at day rate?

    Last winter our most expensive month was January with a bill of £110*. That was for normal leccy demand, space heating (HP powered by batts (and a bit of PV)), DHW, cooking and transport (BEV's). Leccy import was ~1,100kWh, almost all cheap rate at 7p/kWh, about 14kWh was at day rate (~25p/kWh).

    Also, and I appreciate this is an edge case, we couldn't get permission from the DNO for more export. But by having batts on the DC side (as a buffer), we were able to upgrade 3.58kWp of solar behind a 3.7kW inverter, with 6.75kWp of PV behind a 3.68kW limited hybrid inverter. I know that's not what you were saying, but the battery allows us to generate far more per year than we otherwise could. That extra generation displaces more import, and earns more export.

    *That includes gas cost, approx 100kWh of gas which should move to leccy consumption at a roughly 1:1 unit cost, but save ~£10pm in standing charges. So £100 for Jan is a reasonable assumption estimating forward. Currently total leccy and gas for the year should be £650 to £700, with export income of ~£600.
    Mart. Cardiff. 8.72 kWp PV systems (2.12 SSW 4.6 ESE & 2.0 WNW). 20kWh battery storage. Two A2A units for cleaner heating. Two BEV's for cleaner driving.

    For general PV advice please see the PV FAQ thread on the Green & Ethical Board.
  • NedS
    NedS Posts: 4,602 Forumite
    Sixth Anniversary 1,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    My battery offers full home backup so automatically kicks in and allows me to continue to run the house throughout a power cut - priceless!

    Our green credentials: 12kW Samsung ASHP for heating, 7.2kWp Solar (South facing), Tesla Powerwall 3 (13.5kWh), Net exporter
  • Croft12
    Croft12 Posts: 254 Forumite
    Tenth Anniversary 100 Posts Name Dropper
    Shiftyxx said:
    The maths is simple. If you DON'T have panels, you can sell the electricity you generate to EON for 16.5p/kWh. When you later need the power, you can buy it back for 21p inc VAT (as at Aug 2025, also from EON). So it'll cost you the difference, which is 4.5p/kWh. If you DO have batteries, you'll use your own power and save that 4.5p / kWh. So a 3kW battery will save you a maximum of 13.5p a day, (assuming it gets fully charged every day, which it won't in the Winter). In one year, this works out to a maximum of £49. In reality, it'll be less than that as some Winter days generate less than 2kWh in the whole day - So let's assume batteries save you £40/year. If the battery costs £5000, they you should get your money back in around 125 years - assuming the battery lasts 125 years, which of course, it doesn't!. So if you buy the battery when you are 20, and you live to 150, and the battery is still working, you'll be in profit. Good luck with that then !!!

    Its not so simple. eg if you are on IOF you might export >30kwh/d at this time of year at 26p average -v- 15p
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