Those things I mentioned are a big part, if not the biggest part of the cost increases.rev wrote: ↑Wed Mar 22, 2023 2:18 pmAre any of those things you mentioned, contributing factors to the constant increase in what consumers are paying for electricity?
What other reasons are contributing to it.
Governments keep promising they'll do something, but so far we see them doing nothing that is bringing the cost down or at the very least stabilising it.
Above I was just pointing out that its not just peoples choices.
Im sure we're all happy for Bits that's he's 95% self sufficient and has a solar+battery setup. Im sure we're all happy he can afford that setup, its not cheap particularly sufficient battery storage.
Is everyone else in the same boat, able to afford such setups?
Clearly not.
On top of that, we live in a time when everyone is concious of energy use/waste. Many people are doing what they can afford, for many that is just turning off power points and switching to LED globes around the house. For most pensioners its not running heating or air-conditioning because they can't afford the rising costs.
So it has little to do with the pig headed dismissive attitude you'd expect from a conservative politician of "its your own fault because of the choices you've made".
Prices aren't rising by 22% because of lifestyle choices.
They are only going to get worse. renewables are likely the least expensive.
Much of electricity generation is privatised, so governments can't do anything about generation costs going up. Another big cause of increased prices is network costs. Network renewal happens regardless, so not a lot governments can do there either.
Generation costs are going up whether it's coal, gas, nuke, renewables. Renewables likely the least expensive.
Distribution costs are going up, no matter what. Likely renewables cause a bigger rise.
Costs are going up regardless. There's nothing governments can do to make it cheaper.