So, I just got my true up bill.
Total charges for the year (after adding back in an automatic payment that was made on my first bill) was $58.76.
Adding back in the two CA climate credits of $63.12, the total bill (without the credits) would have been $121.88.
The minimal daily charge of $0.329 times 365 days would be $120.08.
I'm now back to not understanding a) how NBC charges are calculated, and b) whether they are in addition to daily minimal charge.
I'm happy about my first years bill being $58.76.
By my own spreadsheet of daily use (getting data from the Watt Node on consumption, and production data from SolarEdge), I used roughly 12.2 MWh for the year which at the SDGE tiered rate structure would have been over $4200 of electric bills. Note my 12 months prior to solar bills were about $3100 on a use of 10 MWh -- the higher use this past 12 months was not being afraid of running the air conditioner, which dramatically improved my life as my wife was much happier.
sdge 2018 true up.JPG
Total charges for the year (after adding back in an automatic payment that was made on my first bill) was $58.76.
Adding back in the two CA climate credits of $63.12, the total bill (without the credits) would have been $121.88.
The minimal daily charge of $0.329 times 365 days would be $120.08.
I'm now back to not understanding a) how NBC charges are calculated, and b) whether they are in addition to daily minimal charge.
I'm happy about my first years bill being $58.76.
By my own spreadsheet of daily use (getting data from the Watt Node on consumption, and production data from SolarEdge), I used roughly 12.2 MWh for the year which at the SDGE tiered rate structure would have been over $4200 of electric bills. Note my 12 months prior to solar bills were about $3100 on a use of 10 MWh -- the higher use this past 12 months was not being afraid of running the air conditioner, which dramatically improved my life as my wife was much happier.
sdge 2018 true up.JPG
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