Frederick Bott
1 min readSep 12, 2023

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That last point is where I see some problems. 20 to 30 percent of utilities energy market has already moved to domestic and community solar, though they don't like admitting it. Their shareholder base won't be reducing accordingly, so they have to squeeze energy prices ever harder from that reducing base of consumers, to stay solvent, obviously impossible whilst domestic and community solar continues to grow like the leaves on a new tree.
They have to fold, sooner or later, the only question is when, and how far will consumers continue to be driven to keep paying ever escalating energy bills?
It might seem like the way out is for utilities energy companies themselves to go solar, but if money as debt can never represent solar, then the value of money as debt has to keep losing as well, so they are stuck between a rock and a hard place, until they start to issue solar indexed UBI to all people, which is the only way to represent the economic value of product created fron energy which was donated, nothing asked in return by the sun.
Interesting times, but it doesn't look good for profit driven business, which actually was always an energy con.

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Frederick Bott
Frederick Bott

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