• @[email protected]
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    63 days ago

    How convenient, right after they bribed their captive regulator to slash reimbursement rates for home solar, they force everyone to pay time of use electric rates.

    PG&E is a criminal conspiracy.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 days ago

      Let’s not forget how will only buy electricity back at a variable yet, sell it at a static rate and keep the profit.

      Also up charging a tax on selling electricity back into the grid for “use of their equipment”, which understandable i get but again c’mon.

      The realistic progress needing to be done here is a battery storage solution as power needed during intense solar days is effectively 0% in California nowadays. We need to store that energy and use it during night but then it eats into PG&Es profits and we can’t have that can we?

      Everything done under the guise of “progress” is helping a corporation somewhere.

      • @Buddahriffic
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        32 days ago

        Sounds to me like the best way to progress at this point would be to nationalize the utility and focus it on power generation and management rather than profit.

        And IMO similar could be said about many things.

  • @SzethFriendOfNimi
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    3 days ago

    I know it’s not the point of the article but seeing a person in a trench/ditch with no reinforcement and no slope makes me so nervous.

    That’s a bad way to go if it collapses.

    https://www.osha.gov/trenching-excavation

    The more I look at it the more it may not be quite 5 feet requiring it. Here’s hoping so.

  • @hesusingthespiritbomb
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    33 days ago

    I feel like there are a lot of systemic problems with the electrical grid in California that need to be addressed before projects like this happen.

    As far as I can tell there has never been any sort of reckoning among management at California utilities for the decades of underinvestment and mismanagement.

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      33 days ago

      PG&E literally went bankrupt because they didn’t inspect a powerline, and the cast-iron hooks holding it up swung slowly back and forth over a century until they wore through, dropping a live powerline to the ground, sparking a fire, and causing towns to burn down.

      • @hesusingthespiritbomb
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        13 days ago

        Yeah so unless there was a complete overhaul that involved firing multiple layers of management maybe putting more load on the grid isn’t the best idea.

        • @[email protected]OPM
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          3 days ago

          The bankruptcy took out a big chunk of their executive team, and induced a huge investment in grid upgrades. So completely reasonable actually.