Stupid arguments do not change reality.
I've watched housing move from costing five years of gross annual income to eight years of an annual income in just a few short years. That dramatic rise hasn't stopped people from considering life indoors-- they just realize the neccessity and commit to the expense. One reason is the amortization.
The argument against alternative energy is the expense. While traditional generation has a carbon hit, the upfront dollar costs are cheap. People don't want to spend the upfront costs. But I think the ice is thawing. I was at Costco, and they are selling portable solar arrays for $300. The massive power outtages have given people reason to doubt the constancy of their power supply. Like it or not, people are going off the grid-- either they are choosing energy alternatives or they're getting punted off of the grid when their power supplier fails them. What if there were a way to amortize your alternative energy?
Enter Citizenre. This company is going to home owners with an offer: let Citizenre install a solar array capable of supplying the home with power and let Citizenre charge you for the power coming down from the roof. The homeowner pays a small amount upfront as a deposit. Within 15 years, the cost of the equipment should have been paid off by the homeowner's payments to Citizenre. The equipment has a likely lifespan of 25 years so Citizenre can use those 10 years as their profit margin. In effect, Citizenre becomes a power supplier-- instead of threading 1000 miles of cable that bleed EM into our cells, their power runs 20 feet to a power inverter.
The people behind Citizenre, namely Rob Styler bailed out of California company, Equinox, three years before the Federal Trade Commission shut it down. So, is this like Hill-Murray and Associates for a consumer model of delivering alternative energy? Or could this be the real deal? The good side: regardless how well Citizenre does this, other players can come into the marketplace: without the need for infrastructure, there could be 50 amortized energy players in a market without threat of a market glut. Even if there is a glut, these suppliers can go overseas to Asia and Africa and electrify them one hut at a time.
2 comments:
Howdy,
Frank Knight here an Ecopreneur for the Powur of Citizenre. Thanks for the nice words. I am very happy to make a huge difference in pollution with the awesome tools I have. If anyone has any questions please contact me. I am more than happy to help!
Thanks
www.jointhesolution.com/flagnomore
Mike,
I've done substantial research into CitizenRE. What I found out is on record at http://www.renewableenergyaccess.com/rea/news/reinsider/story?id=47419
Jeff Wolfe, CEO, groSolar
Post a Comment