DadBald
Well-known member
Not a formal sensitivity analysis, but I played around with it and it definitely affects payback. I was mostly surprised that at 19 cents/kWh payback was still 17 years with an installer. I used a 3% escalation rate, which I think is conservative. Our rates have gone up 30% in the last 4 years. The thing is, it's so volatile and based on world events, it's highly unpredictable. Our neighbors in Indiana have low rates that just got slashed some more this year. I'm sure overall it will be going up, not sure how much or how fast.Did you do any sensitivity analysis on energy costs over time?
Payback was the biggest limitation to my decision, but there were other motivators too, like being energy independent, clean energy, etc. Also, the thought of eventually driving for almost free has gotta be appealing So even if we don't see rates increase at 3% I'll still be happy with the numbers. But I'm fairly certain that's conservative.
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