Those who are currently planning a photovoltaic system or installing one in February should take a look at the Solar Peak Law.
In times of negative electricity prices, it seems that there will no longer be any compensation, or operators will be forced to limit the system’s output. From my perspective, this means that photovoltaic systems without storage will likely no longer be economical compared to those with storage.
Our (storage-free) system will be installed on the roof this week, and I hope we can commission it before the deadline for the law to take effect.
In times of negative electricity prices, it seems that there will no longer be any compensation, or operators will be forced to limit the system’s output. From my perspective, this means that photovoltaic systems without storage will likely no longer be economical compared to those with storage.
Our (storage-free) system will be installed on the roof this week, and I hope we can commission it before the deadline for the law to take effect.
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nordanney10 Feb 2025 14:15Musketier schrieb:
Does the grid operator install the smart meter?I have no idea. The photovoltaic system was installed in 2021. From 2022 onward, the consumption has been well over 6,000 kWh. So far, no one has contacted me. However, I haven’t followed up either; I was only told at some point that although it is mandatory, the grid operators themselves decide when and to whom they install the meters. They simply don’t have enough capacity to be everywhere at once.I would stay calm about all of this. The network operators won’t respond that quickly. They have other priorities and not enough staff to handle this promptly. The funny thing is, when they start to impose restrictions, they are also obligated to fix the underlying cause of the restriction. In other words, they have to upgrade the infrastructure. They would rather let the transformers burn out than impose restrictions.