Since I still had exactly the right amount of aluminum sheets left, I started adding a metal roof to my bike shelter.
If all goes well, it will fit exactly 5 photovoltaic panels, which will be installed as soon as the ridiculous 600-watt limit is lifted (01.01.2024).
But above all, I wanted to share with you the interesting evening sky over Münsterland ;-)
If all goes well, it will fit exactly 5 photovoltaic panels, which will be installed as soon as the ridiculous 600-watt limit is lifted (01.01.2024).
But above all, I wanted to share with you the interesting evening sky over Münsterland ;-)
kbt09 schrieb:
Then you don’t have to comply with the BKW limits, or rather a BKW also expands the existing system, so you can equip your 5 allowed modules with a suitable inverter or string inverter and then simply register an expansion for your current system.Isn't there a deadline (2 years) to report the system expansion in order to keep the same feed-in tariff? Also, wouldn’t a qualified electrician need to be involved (one authorized by the grid operator – right)? The system was commissioned in September or October 2021.kbt09 schrieb:
As far as I know, you cannot register a battery storage system next to an existing photovoltaic system on the same meter.That should be possible, though. As far as I know, the system sizes are proportionally divided by percentage, and the compensation is calculated accordingly.i_b_n_a_n schrieb:
Isn’t there a deadline (2 years) within which an expansion of the system must be reported in order to receive the same feed-in tariff? No, that is a different issue. This concerns the tiered tariff system. If the expansion takes place more than 12 months after the initial commissioning, the system size is reassessed for the tariff rate. For example, if you already have a 9 kWp system and add another 9 kWp, then if this happens within less than 12 months, it counts as a single system (with 18 kWp), and you receive the tariff rate for <10 kWp on 1 kWp and the lower tariff rate for >10 kWp on 8 kWp. If more than 12 months pass between the installations, the new 9 kWp are calculated entirely at the tariff rate for <10 kWp (but always at the tariff rate valid at the time of the expansion, not the old rate).
hanse987 schrieb:
That should be possible. As far as I know, the system sizes are proportionally divided in percentages, and the compensation is calculated accordingly. Maybe I expressed myself incorrectly. What I meant is that for a CHP system, if there is already another system installed, the simplified CHP registration is not possible, and it must be reported through an electrician. Regarding the compensation, I agree with you.
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