The distribution limits are almost always an afternoon/evening thing. Early afternoon for warm climates (aircon and cooking dinner) and evening for cold climates (cooking dinner, showers, heating).
Midday for solar injection.
Hence the famous ‘duck curve’.
The distribution network has plenty of capacity overnight; we just need people to wait until about 11PM before we start charging.
At that point we get the question of whether we have the generation.
The name you are looking for is Residential Time-of-Use. A lot of customers are not aware that their utility company offers Residential Time-of-Use rate plans. Some even offer multiple options, but many do not advertize it. If you are not subscribed to a Residential Time-of-Use plan, you are over paying.
Yes, but…
The distribution limits are almost always an afternoon/evening thing. Early afternoon for warm climates (aircon and cooking dinner) and evening for cold climates (cooking dinner, showers, heating).
Midday for solar injection.
Hence the famous ‘duck curve’.
The distribution network has plenty of capacity overnight; we just need people to wait until about 11PM before we start charging.
At that point we get the question of whether we have the generation.
Pretty simple for most EVs to set a schedule I’d think. My Tesla allows that so I avoid peak
The name you are looking for is Residential Time-of-Use. A lot of customers are not aware that their utility company offers Residential Time-of-Use rate plans. Some even offer multiple options, but many do not advertize it. If you are not subscribed to a Residential Time-of-Use plan, you are over paying.