arp2041
BANNED
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2012
- Messages
- 10,406
- Reaction score
- -9
- Country
- Location
His account was hacked.
How else do you explain his return to PDF after so many months with such changed attitude?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
His account was hacked.
How else do you explain his return to PDF after so many months with such changed attitude?
yes.. since we are talking about ghettos !!!KARACHI??? Was this the BENCHMARK you will like to compare with.......
That is the price distribution company pays. In most cases( except cities like Mumbai), it is some state government owned company.Is that a price from the producer direct to the customer or thats the price paid by the government?
The step is already being implemented in some states. You get 50% subsidy for the installation. The meter will track both power generated and consumed. It can even contribute back to the grid/line.Next step, rooftop solar panels connected to grid.
The step is already being implemented in some states. You get 50% subsidy for the installation. The meter will track both power generated and consumed. It can even contribute back to the grid/line.
Once installed, if your panels produce more electricity than your house consumes, you get paid per unit contributed.
The step is already being implemented in some states. You get 50% subsidy for the installation. The meter will track both power generated and consumed. It can even contribute back to the grid/line.
Once installed, if your panels produce more electricity than your house consumes, you get paid per unit contributed.
All that requires massive investments in smart grid/metering and are frankly an overkill for simple Indian homes.
But as a simple, cost-effective first step, there are already enough things that Home Rooftop Solar Panels can accomplish even when not connected to the grid.
Another way to drive down costs, is to do away with the large storage batteries. You could simply use the electricity when sunlight is available (energy guzzlers like AC's and their kind) and switch back to grid when it isn't.
That way, not only the installation costs/complexity are reduced significantly but also the day-time peak load is taken care of, to a large extent!
The investment is one time, but still high as of today. I am posting the links for AP. But I found out about similar scheme initially in some other state. The FAQs are better here:That's a good model because no large land acquisition would be required, and most of the infrastructure cost, capacity build up, maintenance, management, etc. will be decentralized to the individual owners. Do you have any idea about the tentative cost (after subsidy) and ROI?
What will be the cost of such up-gradation? Maybe new technological development can drive down the cost, like that happened in telecom.