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I imagine as we move to renewables, a lot of places are gonna have similar situation. Maybe not as bad, but I don't know what the situation with the taxes there is.
There's a fixed cost associated with having the infrastructure that maintains a wire from consumer to producer functional, if you're not paying for electricity, you're paying for all the transmission lines and other hardware.
I can't imagine any grid making it profitable for people to sell power to it, sounds like a nightmare to try and balance load with random home setups bumping it up and down, but a fully self-sufficient solar home could probably eliminate all costs but maintenance for the grid connection, if you want backup to solar.
Yeah, that does make sense.
However I suspect that what's charged in Portugal for that cost is way beyond a fair value, with rent-seeking "administrative costs" of the power provider which far exceed actual real costs in the era of smart-meters and computing (plus which are already included in the price for power itself, which is why retail power prices are much higher than bulk market prices, thus there's double-dipping going on there) as well as "taxes" to pay for subsidies for renewables which were often de facto politicians needlessly shoving money to their mates so that they had higher profits - the big power company in Portugal is very well connected politically and is involved in at least on major Corruption case - rather than actually needed to incentivise provision of things which would otherwise not be provided.