Quote:
Originally Posted by OpenD
Misquoting me and misstating what I say uses another very popular fallacy of yours, the straw man argument.
I never said that big energy players weren't going to continue to operate the transmission grid. They take a huge amount of capital to build and maintain. But power generation and supply is no longer exclusive to them. The grid is becoming more like a public highway that any company can drive on rather than a private railroad track that only they can operate. That's a huge difference.
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Don't look now, your other posts are disagreeing with you. Off grid power is a bit player, even most roof top solar flows into the grid. The grid players are the same and will continue to be so. The names might change, those controlling them won't.
Now the grid is like a public highway anyone can drive on? Unbelievable and wrong.
You cited Southern California Edison as one company on a short list of companies that will control renewable energy storage. Ask just about anyone in Southern California if that company isn't a monopoly. If anyone can drive on the grid as you claim, why do so many people in SoCal have to buy their energy from SCE and why do people with rooftop solar have to feed into the grid? Their only way out is offered use and just how is that working out for the average or typical "anyone"?
Your own posts disagree with what you say after the OP. LOL.