BUY BACK RATE

What Is the Buy Back Rate for Solar Power

What Is the Buy Back Rate for Solar Power

Ever wondered why your neighbor with solar panels keeps grinning at their electricity bill? The secret sauce might be the buy back rate - the price utilities pay for excess solar power you generate. Think of it like a reverse electricity meter: when your panels produce more than you use, you're essentially selling energy back to the grid.

Georgia Power Solar Buy Back Rate

Georgia Power Solar Buy Back Rate

Let's cut to the chase - if you've installed solar panels in Georgia, you're probably getting 3-4 cents per kWh through Georgia Power's Renewable Energy Credit program. That's kind of like selling organic eggs at factory-farm prices. But why does this matter right now?

JST-Back-300 Just Solar

JST-Back-300 Just Solar

You know what's wild? Over 30% of solar energy gets wasted globally because homes can't store what they don't use immediately. The JST-Back-300 changes that math completely. As Texas faced rolling blackouts last month and European energy prices hit record highs, this battery system's timing couldn't be better.

Back Up Battery for Home: Your Shield Against Power Outages

Back Up Battery for Home: Your Shield Against Power Outages

It's Friday night in Texas, and a sudden ice storm knocks out your electricity. Your fridge full of groceries starts warming up, the Wi-Fi router blinks off, and your phone battery dwindles to 12%. Now, what if you had a home backup battery quietly humming in the garage?

Back Up Solar System: Your Ultimate Energy Safety Net

Back Up Solar System: Your Ultimate Energy Safety Net

You know that sinking feeling when storms knock out your electricity? For 2.5 million Americans in 2023 alone, that nightmare became reality. Traditional generators? They're sort of like using a teacup to bail out a sinking ship - noisy, fuel-dependent Band-Aid solutions.

Solar Back Up Battery

Solar Back Up Battery

You know that sinking feeling when the lights flicker during a storm? In 2023 alone, U.S. households experienced 7+ hours of power outages on average – a 35% jump from 2020. Aging infrastructure meets extreme weather, and frankly, the grid wasn't built for today's climate chaos.