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Post by zanygame on Oct 15, 2022 16:18:41 GMT
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Post by colbops on Oct 15, 2022 19:27:13 GMT
Sadly the catch is in the article "at market prices" We need these setups to be driving energy prices down to sensible levels rather then letting a few profiteer.
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Post by zanygame on Oct 15, 2022 20:24:20 GMT
Sadly the catch is in the article "at market prices" We need these setups to be driving energy prices down to sensible levels rather then letting a few profiteer. If I understand what's happening there, its a long term investment and not dependent on a few years of high gas prices.
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Post by colbops on Oct 15, 2022 20:34:03 GMT
Sadly the catch is in the article "at market prices" We need these setups to be driving energy prices down to sensible levels rather then letting a few profiteer. If I understand what's happening there, its a long term investment and not dependent on a few years of high gas prices. Keep it simple. They are talking about supplying electricity at current market rates. Current market rates for electricity are crazy. They should be able to supply those 18,000 homes at well below current market rates, while still covering off their capex , opex and turning a reasonable profit.
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Post by B0ycey on Oct 15, 2022 21:00:09 GMT
If I understand what's happening there, its a long term investment and not dependent on a few years of high gas prices. Keep it simple. They are talking about supplying electricity at current market rates. Current market rates for electricity are crazy. They should be able to supply those 18,000 homes at well below current market rates, while still covering off their capex , opex and turning a reasonable profit. Well I agree with the crux, but that is because I believe energy should be nationalised. A free market contains supply and demand. That is the price of energy and as a wholesaler, they charge whatever the going rate is.
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Post by zanygame on Oct 15, 2022 21:13:58 GMT
If I understand what's happening there, its a long term investment and not dependent on a few years of high gas prices. Keep it simple. They are talking about supplying electricity at current market rates. Current market rates for electricity are crazy. They should be able to supply those 18,000 homes at well below current market rates, while still covering off their capex , opex and turning a reasonable profit. Why should I keep it simple so you can push your point. The truth is investors would not put money into a scheme which relies on a short term glitch in the markets.
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