@@AKARazorback Let me say this very slowly so it can sink in: Fossil fuels have caused dangerous climate change that is melting the Arctic and Antarctic circles. Any minor damage wind turbines cause is simply a cost we will have to accept.
PLEASE get Greg to pin Miliband down and ask why £22B is better spent doing carbon capture than putting wholesale grid storage out there and trebling the renewables .... then if we have some money left maybe look at carbon capture. So much easier stopping it source.
he's probably been bought. The first day the new conservative government in New Zealand was in session they cancelled a pumped hydro project that would have stored all our renewable energy and announced the repeal of bans on the exploration for oil and gas and mining for coal in conservation estates and cancelled tax incentives for EVs and disincentives for large ICE powered vehicles. The New Zealand government is currently owned by Big Oil and Big Tobacco
Just because money was announced as being spent on CCS technology, doesn't mean the govt aren't spending in other areas of the energy grid to reduce or eliminate CO2e emissions. No singular direction will achieve the targets in the desired timeframe. Taking a wide-angled approach and spreading investments across various sectors of the industry will achieve goals quicker. Other investments that haven't been broadcast include; 32.9m in the development of energy storage technology 11m+ in smart energy systems 1.5bn in green infrastructure 240m into the evolving hydrogen sector 160m in port infrastructure for off-shore wind 630m to improve energy efficiency measures for new-builds and low-income households. These are all investment projects that have been initialised in the last 4 years
One important reason for regional pricing would be that it puts a price tag on NIMBYism. You don't want local windmills or solar ? OK, pay more for your power since your region has a power deficit.
As a German living in Bavaria I say: hell, yeah! NIMBYism is really going rampart here and we need to do something about it. This idea sounds like a good solution!
@@haderlumpi Another mechanism would be to make network charges relative to the distance, i.e. local electricity will be cheaper. With current schemes, you pay the same whether the power plant is your neighbor, or all across the country.
Yes, yes, yes! Although I think people who live near wind farms should get some small one time compensation - but cheaper power when it's windy is an excellent idea!
He obviously has a technical background and understands these electrical systems. Our electrical providers in my area used to have technical people in management back in the early 1960s. However, it has changed with the takeover by lawyers, PR people, bean counters, and political class members who fundamentally don't understand how the grid works. Our utilities don't want solar or batteries they don't own and act accordingly. For example, the Secretary of Energy in the US is an ex-beauty pageant winner with a non-stem education through Harvard Law. Nowhere in her CV are there indications that she has enough technical knowledge to understand energy system dynamics or nuclear weapons (also in her job description). A management rule: You can't rationally manage what you don't understand, but you can cause failure.
Calling her out for having won a beauty pageant in HIGHSCHOOL is a bit sexist to say the least. Yes she is unqualified in terms of a meritocracy and seemingly has no knowledge or background in energy; but labeling her as a pageant winner to discount her ability or intelligence is incredibly unfair. If she was truly unfit we'd see something like trumps sec of education Betsy devos
@@thartwig I was trying to point out that her background was orthogonal to understanding energy. There is nothing wrong with a beauty pageant, but it is of no help in understanding the dynamics of an electrical grid where the supply and demand must always balance within milliseconds.
Love it when someone I used to work with does well. Despite working in a big global corporation Greg was always a different person than most others. Well done Greg, keep it up..👏👏👏
The electric companies in the USA puts heavy fees on people to hook up solar of wind. They charge you 3 times the amount at peak vs off peak. This makes it almost not worth doing it. The electric companies put restrictions on where you put the solar panels where the peak usage during the summer and don't let you put them where they will feed the grid off peak. So you would have to have two separate systems. One for peak and another to charge a battery bank to supplement when you can't produce enough to cover your usage. This greatly increases the cost and complexity of your system. This companies ideas could help if the electric companies go along with it. They don't make high profits from people with solar and wind connected to the grid unless they can't produce enough to cover their usage. The solar companies will not install enough panels on your roof to guarantee you can produce more than you use. The electric companies will not let them!
@gerbre1 You normally don't get a choice that I am aware of. The electric companies have areas they service due to where they place their utility polls. Where you live determines who services your home. In new construction areas where different electric companies are close, it may be possible to have a choice?
Don't even connect to the grid. I am just going to spend about $2000, instead of $30,000 and just put a portable system on my roof and feed it to the major energy users in my house. My 3 fridges/freezer, and computers and TV's. I have an open basement and access through the floor. They use the most energy and you can just run extension cords to a few locations and then use automatic transfer switches to switch back to the grid when your solar and battery are depleted. Diverts automatically back to solar in the morning when the sun comes up. I can't justify an expensive solar system since I currently get some of the cheapest electricity in North America and my bill is less than $100 CAD per month now. In Florida electrical costs are absurd and my house there regularly uses $400 USD. I have no room for solar on my roof since I have a solar water heating setup for my pool. My home in Canada uses A/C from May to Sept and that does use a lot of energy , so I will have to investigate how to supply it with solar as well. It takes 220 volts.
@gerbre1 I am not aware of any electric company in the USA that doesn't have the extra fees associated with connecting renewable resources to the grid. They loose money or can't control the excess energy being added to the grid. If they implement battery storage like Tesla did in Australia maybe we could get legislation to prevent them from robbing us? They already pay drastically less for what they buy compared to what they sell. It's a legal monopoly and they lobby the government to keep their shady business practices alive.
@jeffguarino2097 unfortunately if you are already connected they will fine you for not connecting!!!! How this is legal I don't know? I have land elsewhere that I will be off grid and there is no current electricity polls. I just hope they can't force you to connect when they do put them in. I know I could just run one circuit to power a light bulb but it's still $50 a month to be hooked up!
I did not know about Kraken, so thank you. They are on the right track. Some of your videos expose speculative technologies that may never pay off, but this is the opposite! I will definitely keep my eyes on this one.
🔥🔥🔥 просто огонь. Интеллектуальная динамическая логистика - один из базовых ключей к быстрому переходу на 100% clean energy: PV, battery, EV, heat pumps, thermal isolation, recuperation on heat exchangers, + this energy logistics
Yes, the axioms of a perfect free market are altruist capitalists and well informed smart consumers. The world is ideal if evil does not exist, an obvious statement.
@@aniksamiurrahman6365 google just wants your information to sell it to others, whereas operation octopus wants that information to tailor the grids' operation to its usage.
Another issue that is not being talked about enough is the standing charge fiasco/ rip off. As a small charity, who own a building we have had a new 3 phase power supply installed. Initially we were going for 54KVA, but the engineer changed it to 69 kVA to 'future proof' us, e.g, for car charger, heat pumps, as well as a small 'commercial standard' kitchen for a community cafe. Our standing charge moved from £1.30 a day to £12 a day, that is at £4400 a year, more than our total electricity use prior to the new kitchen. I hear numerous horror stories of small business es getting stitched up like this. i contacted the government and that agree something is arwy, responding 'The Government recognises that too much of the burden of the bill is placed on standing charges. Ofgem has recently published a further discussion paper on standing charges, this includes some specific measures which may result in changes to standing charges for some groups of consumers.' however it isn't enough to stop this rip off. we are getting a 24 KW PV array for our roof, but that won't mitigate the standing charge rip off.
The reason for engaging an engineer is to avoid these pitfalls so he has failed his obligation so you don't need to pay him. (Yes, the argument stands up in Court).
Notice that "local prices" may create massive inequalities to the point of injustice, if it happens that poor areas ends with more expensive power than rich ones for instance...
I really like your channel - none of the hate filled politicisation of our global warming challenge. Just good insights into technologies etc that will hopefully get us out of this predicament!
Deregulated mean less expance for You to obtain energy, because it's provider pay less to meet this regulations, inspections and etc. If business wish to be more than fast pased one time scam than it not interrested in fooling You and because it need stable and prefferably growing client base it will work to be at least good enough for You, because otherwise You go to thier competitors. And precisely there in play enter commodification, because now You actually got a choice and can vote with Your wallet. Can You if energy generation monopolized by government? No. Is it good thou? No. And I have enough examples. I found that many in Europe, including UK, and USA somehow got sickness called "socialism"... It just don't work. There no any good wizard which solve Your problem for free and least of all it do governmental authority. My country lost because of this sickness millions of people dead and traumatized rest of us. Just don't. Only "social" we need it is exactly by interpreneurs like in this video and people which support them. Any authority just destroying those ties. Be wise.
@@jackson8085 Not talking about solar panels. I am concerned that commoditization of kWh creates perverse incentives that drive up the marginal costs of energy during peak. You can’t store electricity the same way you store grain. You have to transform it to another form of energy first. So someone somewhere has to have a responsibility for maintaining grid reliability for the few hours of the year with the highest demand. Higher prices don’t always do the trick, because generators aren’t guaranteed a return on their investment if they never run the generator. Traditional utilities solved this by rate basing capital investment with a regulatory apparatus to make sure they are properly planning and aren’t gouging customers. CA and TX experimentation with deregulation has been mixed with a lot of costs being passed on to consumers with lower reliability. Maybe there is a path forward that can maintain reliable electric service and ensure consumers aren’t gouge while still being decentralized, but I haven’t seen it yet. Personally, I believe public and cooperative power must play a role in securing electricity as a service and basic human right rather than electricity being commodified and sold to the highest bidder.
regulated means safe to use and cheap. Deregulated means monopoly. This company builds trust right now and is cheap. When they get to monopoly phase they will milk every penny out of its customers pockets they can. Either they should have competition or be heavily regulated by then.
@Adrian_kal disagree, because I live in country in which it used for forced businesses takeover and actual racketeering of it. Current system provoke negative selection to governmental institutions. Only real regulation are needed is arbitration to prevent uncompetitive actions, but in reality biggest businesses anyway put thier cronies everywhere or make some. Law mast be one for anyone. As long as it true than most regulations are useless. Customer must think for what he/she actually pay money. This is why it is dumb when russians start to post videos where they use Ipads as kitchen board "in a protest" to Apple - they already pay for it so what they doing with Ipad and etc. just mean nothing. And if You not pay to some company via buying thier stuff - it is only and most powerful regulation. As long as customer use critical thinking - any regulation useless. I understand that on practice it amputated by educational system and popular culture, but it is also a problem. Regulations are just a way You give up Your responsibility on government and in many cases it not interested in Your or other citizen standards of living even if on paper must be so. Any system can be abused. And allways it abused from inside.
Thank you for quality programming. What you are describing here is accurate - the flight to safety to the US stock market and dollar. This is what is keeping the market going at this time and preventing a crash. This "melt UP" phase will go on for a while, then as the global economy crashes so will US markets only harder due to the "No Win scenario" that has been created by so much obscene debt. Next comes the "Default Phase" with mega-massive bankruptcies and lastly "Asset Seizures" where banks and the Fed government will simply declare an extreme national emergency to justify the crisis and debit your account directly. The fools will think that this could never happen. The actual legislation for this type of action is already in place. My advice to anyone feeling the heat in this inflation, just trade long term more than ever, I have made over 370k from day trading with Leasie Aiken in few weeks, this is one of the best medium to backup your assets incase it goes bearish.
This is exactly what Big time investors are talking about, not just you. key thing here is to always trades with a good strategy even if the price goes up or down.
I live in Italy, I abandoned methane completely, two years ago. I would like to try this services, before for my house, and after for my condominium, that has some solar panels and heat pump. The potential of this approach is immense!
It’s such a pity that octopus aren’t in Northern Ireland. I live in the Antrim hills & we have a similar density of wind energy as Scotland. However a lot of it is shut down at the weekend due to a stubborn & outdated grid owner. There’s actually 3000 farmers here who have planning permission for a single turbine on their farms but only 1000 ever got a grid connection. We really need a disruptor like Octopus to shake the whole thing up. Ironically Octopus makes its heat pumps in Belfast.
I’ve been an Octopus customer for 3 years. I’ve got the lot, solar, home battery, heat pump, EV, Electroverse card, Intelligent Octopus Go tariff and a Smart meter that has hardly worked in the last 12 months. Unfortunately the one thing I can’t touch, the one thing I am totally reliant on Octopus to fix is broken and Octopus don’t seem capable of fixing it. Great ideas but they also need to get the basics right or time of use tariffs just won’t work.
You mean the smart meter doesn't work? That can simply be the signal to the station is too weak, depending on distance. It's affecting loads of smart meters across the country.
@lettersquash The smart meter did work for a couple of years, then stopped nearly 12 months ago. Octopus have changed the meter and comms hub but can't get it talking to the DCC. Nothing has changed at our end. If signal strength is a problem it's not changed at our end.
@@andybury7639 It sounds like It isn't the smart meter that's not working, but the display in your house. ( You can't run an Octopus Go tariff without it). Like you we have the full house of electrical options. and like you are on Octopus. Our display unit is also f***ed - although to be fair to Octopus it was even before we moved our contract to them. I tend to use my Solar system, provider's app (Sunsync) to monitor what's going on.
I personally like that while Octopus invested in their own heat pump, they understood that they didn't have the technical maturity to make their product viable in a meaningful timeframe, so they diversified and made a very smart investment in Kensa Group. That's smart.
I've been interested in the regional energy pricing initiative since I heard of it. For me it was an instant bottom line boost for all the hospitals, schools, and every other public sector building. Even the MOD would benefit. The fact that we still have a system that actually forces prices to rise and national suppliers cut the production, while energy from international suppliers are used and paid for at the higher price, isn't just stupid, it's shameful.
This was your best episode yet!!! Please investigate it more regarding how it might work in the USA and where the key stakeholders are on this concept. Well done.
In the UK, generation supply & billing are provided by separate companies, we only deal with the billing company & there is competition. As I understand it in most States you have a monolithic monopoly generation/supply/billing company & there is no competition - your State has to change that, at your next election select a Representative who _will_ change it (I expect the Green Party is the most likely in your State).
A good step is to get on a 100% green energy plan from your provider. It puts you money to work and they can budget for cleaner grid improvements much easier.
Here in Italy octopus Is arrived, and Is definitely cheaper then competitors, with finally clear bills. It's a breath of fresh air (infact i am a very satisfied customer).
It's been in Spain for a few months - here the state regulations for selling renewable energy back to the Grid that were intended to be the minimum acceptable within the EU have become the standard. It was impossible to find a company that behaved decently to it's customers - I now get credited for all electricity my solar panels feed back into the Grid. And, if I expand my system (which was a stupid idea, financially, before) I get a more generous rate for electricity fed back in.
I was working in the IT department of one of the behemoths when smart meters were being rolled out. Quite a few of us thought "Hey, with some clever software and appropriate half-hourly import and export tariffs, you could add a household battery and turn domestic households into energy trading hubs".... He actually did it!
I've never really understood how that, or the plan of having people's cars being made available to suck energy out of can really benefit people - it seems more like a means of control. Can you imagine being able to cut off power to whole sections of people you don't like or who are causing problems ( well, that one might be useful in some cases - but it is a political move, not a economic one )
@@justgivemethetruth you're imagining things that are irrelevant, the state already has the physical ability to cut you off or force you to do anything, but it doesn't because of the rule of law.
@@willkinmont611Smart meters aren't there to improve supplies, they're there so you can be cut off when it's decided you're using more than approved by the government.
It's time we declared our energy independence. Cheapest energy in Europe though not necessarily when you need it. Maybe buy a generator before they sell out.
The rabbit hole of consumer renewables started for me in lockdown. Then the view was solar was the starting point. Four years later I'd say that Storage should be the starting point for anyone going down this path. At a national level it's blatantly clear that Storage is the missing factor in the equation. Switching off a wind farm should be a crime. At a domestic level we have more EVs sitting on driveways that could be balancing the grid but very few cars have bidirectional charging. Greg's doing great work but the ignorance(and/or corruption) of politicians will always hold back progress.
which is why voting is a serious undertaking & why we have to monitor our politicians to ensure they deserve repeated votes. Any level of corruption should immediately strike them off your list of available candidates for the next vote.
Storage isn't actually _missing_ it's just in short supply, for instance lots of pumped-storage hydro was put in when they started building nuclear because British reactors run at a steady output but the demand varies enormously.
Let's put the pumped storage myth to bed. It's enormously expensive and we've only got the geography to supply etopia for a day or so, and that's if you drown the populated parts of the Scottish Highlands. Google "Red John Hydro" and then do the numbers yourself, imagine building 500 of these pumped storage behemoths for a three days of electricity. Pump storage only works in concert with short term fluctuations in demand and supply. And it's still cheaper than batteries. Here's what works. Diesel generators. As our renewables powered grid falls on it's arse more and more these things will start popping up all over the place. The most polluting form of energy, save coal, expensive and in a World of Diesel scarcity... Well this isn't going to end well.
As electricity is 15.68% of total Uk energy and octopus is just a percentage of electricity and won't be disrupting energy at all but increasing demand for electric goods I saw this as a paid advertisement and don't think that wise.
@@antonyjh1234yeap...probably most of the coments on the line "Oh Greg is such a genius" are just bots paid by this scammer who can't even fool my drunk uncle...he haven't had any revolutionary idea, the whole sell-speech was "AI, machine learning, Greg is Einstein" ffs please save your bu11sh1t...I'll stop to follow this dumb channel
@@antonyjh1234 Which is a good thing, as electricity generation in the UK has become one of the lower CO₂ emitters compared to other energy-generating sectors. More of this please.
The diagram / animation at 12:00 is such a quick powerful argument. The National Grid numbers on "I am Kate" explain and plot the role of different providers.
Ye are always interesting and informative - but in my opinion, this week's episode was outstanding - particularly superb in terms of positivity and ''can do' thinking". Hope others will take the example, and spread this progress worldwide.
I know cars have bigger batteries and hence the focus on their use in balancing the grid. However, we don’t have a BEV yet but we do have a home battery but I can’t use it in this process. Why? We charge it 8-12kwhrs per day which is more than my son’s BEV uses each week! I pay more for my electricity than my son does! And yes I am an Octopus customer.
That doesn't sound right. A typical electric car goes about 4 miles per kWh, so 10kWh would convert to about 40 miles per week, or only about 6 miles a day, or 2000 miles a year. That's about a quarter of the UK national average or 20 miles a day. If your son drove the average amount, he'd need about 5kWh per day, so he'd still be using about half as much as a typical house.
We're so lucky to have Greg Jackson. Let's hope the Labour govt (Ed Miliband I'm looking at you) builds on its energy pledges and seriously reforms the electricity market and grid connection fiasco - otherwise the whole thing is going nowhere. I'm sure Greg will keep the pressure on, but we need action, FAST!
Electricity is around 20% of the modern worlds energy use, a 100% renewable electricity grid is only 20% of the problem fixed, this is a show to make you think overall progress is being made
@@antonyjh1234 this is true which is why building a bigger grid and switching more use to via electricity is critical (eg EVs, heat pumps etc). Some sectors face big challenges such as aviation, shipping and some industries though. These can't always use electricity directly and alternatives like hydrogen or SAF etc are still problematic.
@@jonmoore176 I get the idea, in a simple world great but the energy and emissions need to be cut now. You are not understanding the mechanics of oil, we get 6000 products from a single barrel, it's refined by heat, off comes gas first, petrol, diesel and all the other 5997 products, last is asphalt. If you want item number 3178 you will get all the others too, of you want asphalt for cars to drive on, you need oil.
@@antonyjh1234 - and yet many in the oil dependant industries are actively working on alternatives to fossil-fuel sources, as they are aware the world is moving away from it and there is oppurtunity to be had in producing alternative sourced products; particularly as fossil-fuels are a finite resource. Asphalt being one example with the industry moving to repair, replace, recycle basis using bio binders rather than oil based feed stocks.
And all we have to do is completely remodel the local electrical grid. And hope that people can afford cars that have sufficient battery capacity. And we don't run out of minerals while this is happening. But perhaps we should get this system in place before abolishing the old school system .
@colinmacdonald5732 they are doing this grid balancing through car charging timing right now to more efficiently balance the grid. No infrastructure needed so far. This just saves money and havingto fire up more gas turbines. If the EVs are on the grid, is it not a good idea to charge the vehicles at the optimal time most convenient to the grid operator to save money and reduce peak demand???
this 'Think' is so valuable. We've has a lot of back and forth with our NV Energy about the whys and wherefores of their decisions. This will allow us to ask about and research where they are in reference to Kraken and in comparison to Octopus. Thanks you for this valuable research and sharing!
I'm with Octopus Energy, for what it's worth. They're certainly pretty competitive in their pricing givern the system they function within . But I think its Greg's bigger ideas that could drive real intelligent change.
EDIT: re-posted because TH-cam deleted my first comment for some reason. This is a really interesting video! I'd genuinely like to learn more about how Kraken makes the introduction of renewable energy generation to the grid easier or more likely. The impression I get from your video is that Octopus Energy, thanks to Kraken, has been steadily eating away the market share of Britain's older energy companies. And they do that by optimization of the grid, which somehow leads to lower electricity prices for the consumer. In Alberta where I live, we've had privatized electricity and natural gas since the 1990's, so it sounds like our market is similar to Britain's in that respect. We can choose different suppliers, but they all charge the same prices. And we've had steadily rising prices for electricity over the last thirty years, with absolutely no discounts. Supposedly the provincial government wants 30% of electricity to come from renewables by 2030, but you can tell their heart isn't in it. Right now about 40% of our electricity comes from natural gas and 40% from coal, and all they really want to do is replace most of the coal with gas. Maybe some of coal's old share of the market would be replaced by solar or wind, but natural gas would still be king here well into the 2050's. It would be freaking incredible if some electricity company could arm themselves with Kraken and change that. We need the same kind of change and grid optimization that Britain is doing, along with the introduction of more renewable sources of energy. It would give the government a collective case of heartburn to see their carefully planned cartel upset by a private operator!
It's the same with Uk, of the carbon intensity gas is currently 82% of generation. Solar and wind haven't cracked 10% of electricity since Friday and electricity is 16% of total energy, so renewables in this case are less than 1% of total energy from them. There is nothing being achieved here overall and nothing achievable will happen with renewables before societal change from the lack of oil happens. “We show in the paper that the amount of copper needed is essentially impossible for mining companies to produce.” "The researchers examined 120 years of global data from copper production dating back to 1900. They then modelled how much copper is likely to be produced for the rest of the century and how much copper the US electricity infrastructure and fleet of cars would need to upgrade to renewable energy. The study found that renewable energy’s copper needs would outstrip what copper mines can produce at the current rate. Between 2018 and 2050, the world will need to mine 115% more copper than has been mined in all of human history up until 2018 just to meet current copper needs without considering the green energy transition. To meet the copper needs of electrifying the global vehicle fleet, as many as six new large copper mines must be brought online annually over the next several decades. About 40% of the production from new mines will be required for EV-related grid upgrades."
@@antonyjh1234I don't know why you're looking at copper, most high-power wiring is aluminium & overhead lines are aluminium over steel & have been for many decades. (Also, most copper supply is recycled material not mined).
Not only was this video an insightful look at how the grid could be improved thru "single pane of glass" management, but it also illustrates why our legacy system is preventing a rapid, much needed switch to cheaper & healthier renewables. We humans have had other encounters with the existential need to change quickly or perish, and we are the descendants of those who did. Especially those who survived the last ice age. So, we CAN do this but the public has to wake up and smell the coffee. Stop electing politicians who will keep tapping on the brakes to please their big donors, the NIMBY's and the Luddites. We need to implement change with some urgency or suffer miserably when our planet crosses some climate tipping points that lie just a mile or so down the road...
On the surface that energy auction looks a bit handicapped. Why are they paying the price of the most expensive energy to everyone? Completely unnecessary distribution of wealth to the providers, while hamstringing the transition because electricity is too expensive. Sounds like the carbon trading boondoggle, make something good (cap) a lot worse (trade). It's almost literally the same as price fixing. People just don't see when they are being fleeced by the collective of businesses, do they, globally. Or call it corruption hidden behind basic math. The decentralization of the auction penalizes the energy hogs by region, which is the right idea, but still a bit of a broad brush. Also it favors the producers again, because in a smaller area, you have fewer bids so higher likelihood of a high cost bid that then everyone gets paid. AI just take over already.
Why are they paying the price of the most expensive energy to everyone? Because this way they are incentivized to get their price as low as possible to be part of the group that gets to sell anything. So the price will be as low as it can possibly be. If you pay them what they are asking, the cheaper operators are now incentivized get their price to just below the cut of. So best case you end up in the same place we are now.
2:20 Kraken isn't an operating system... delivery platform yes, operating system no. "An operating system is system software that manages computer hardware and software resources, and provides common services for computer programs" - Wikipedia.
I don't know the workings of either Kraken, or Tesla's Autobidder, but they seem to be solving similar things (or at least aspects of the same problems). Curious to know in what ways they overlap, and how they differ.
We're cutting our carbon footprint quite nicely, mainly through substituting coal with Gas and woodchips. We've also "exported" much of carbon footprint to China whose coal fired economy supplies our consumer goods. Best of all, our high energy prices are shrinking the real economy, but we're not noticing because the economy is switching to the bloated public sector, a civil servant working from home on his laptop doesn't have quite the same carbon footprint as someone building a marine engine or a transformer. But our wealth depends on real economic activity not paper pushers so we get poorer.
The set of incentives within the economic structure we have lead inevitably to expansion and concentrating power in a hierarchy. Concentrated power attracts the greediest, most narcissistic people in the population and rewards lies. Voting is a popularity contest based on convincing people, not providing actual evidence of competency and morals. Some sort of real competition, a leader obstacle course that proves competency wouldn't be too hard, but proving ethics is hard. Brain scans during some long complicated stressful situation? Gotta be moral puzzles, teaching techniques in old zen poems, to put people in the right state of mind for the scan. I don't know, we're a long way from brain mastery.
@@alanhat5252 Why would I do that? My comment is about how human nature makes voting on a large scale total bullshit at the core. Why would I waste my time and energy on a system I see as deeply, irrevocably flawed? My whole point was it is an absurdity and we should try to fundamentally redesign it, but that can't happen within the flawed voting system, we need a completely different approach.
I guess the grid bureaucrats are apprehensive believing that Jackson wants to run when he has only just learned to start walking. He has a good sales pitch, but I can't help thinking he may be oversimplifying based upon best case scenarios. Hopefully he has got his risk management ducks all lined up & he will be able to deliver on his innovative ideas.
Bring it on Greg! It's hard to get worked up about an energy company but Octopus are the best I've dealt with in fifty years. They do occasionally get stuff wrong but it gets fixed. I get cheap electicity to charge my car and house battery overnight, great export rates for my solar panels, discount on away from home charging via Elecroverse and suspect I will go for the Octopus heat pump solution in the next year. In fact I sell excess from my panels and effectively buy it back cheaper overnight. Using the grid as a battery. Regarding the present method of national bidding and pricing, if we had regional pricing and affordable energy then maybe we wouldnt need winter fuel allowances which, whilst it was paid to pensioners, was effectively going straight to the energy companies. Just a thought. Finally, on the subject of the videos, I find some of the pulsing light coloured graphics a bit hard on the eye. Keep up the good work
Meanwhile the poorest have to pay the highest tariffs, upfront for all their electricity, only able to 'top up' at the local shop (if its open). Additionally living in rented homes without insulation, batteries or EVs. What a wonderfully caring society..
Electricity, not energy, 15.68% of energy is electricity and plastic for the ev comes from the same barrel diesel does, they are refined off at the same time, so more ev's means more diesel as waste, do you think they store this diesel or sell it? Not sure what percentage of overall electricity octopus are but even if they took it all it would only be 16% of energy, with all the added energy that would still be produced none of this is about reducing consumption Nothing of this was anything but a paid advert for more overall consumption, I think the channel should be ashamed of what they are trying to do here. While every bit of renewable you have been able to afford it has not lowered consumption, something that is supposed to halve in the next five years, this is more trade dressed up as efficiency. I personally think we will be back to horses sooner than even a quarter of current vehicles being ev's, but again all that plastic, has an amount of diesel, petrol, propane.
@@Vile_Entity_3545 On occasion EV users get paid to take electricity from the grid at night! The rich and profligate are being rewarded for using excess electricity, by attracting cheaper tariffs for their internet controlled devices and EVs. Meanwhile the poorest can't afford to charge their electricity keys upfront at the (local) shop, even if its open, and live in the least insulated houses. The system is totally iniquitous!
@@antonyjh1234 - and yet EV automakers are aware of the plastic dependencies, increasing the amount of recycled plastics used in their cars to reduce oil dependency. Then there is the plastic industry itself moving to alternative resource stock sources, which are ramping up. So whilst at this point there is a dependency chain on fossil-fuels this is not going to be always the case. One cannot switch overnight from a resource that has been exploited for decaded but it is happening. Your choice is either to be part of this journey or sit in the dark moaning about it without aiding any solution.
This guy sounds fantastic I do have a problem with cars, any car. They are such a wasteful thing,1.5 ton of materials, for something that at very most has two people in it, is parked in a space of some sort at least 60% of its time. They should be unbelievably expensive to buy and run no matter how they are powered. Public transport needs the money not metal rubber and glass for a few people a few hours a day.
High temperature heat pumps maybe easier to install, but they lead to much higher bills than low temperature ones. Instead of 400% efficient it's more3like 300%. Where the cost3of gas electricity means you need them3to hit 350% to break even.
@@motorheadmaximus Not if it leads to impoverishment of the most vulnerable, no. Fossil fuels are simply short term stores of earthly carbon. Liberating them back to the atmosphere and the environment in general is cyclical. The problem is not resource use, its resource exploitation and profligacy.
Can this guy re-write legislation and design efficient public services? The Post Office Inquiry has been revealing the decades horrendous behaviours, but even worse things are going on in other public service fiefdoms. A civil service/agencies/NHS/planning revolution is needed. The National Audit Office, Parliament are useless as people like the Post Office executives lie to Parliamentary Committees and to direct questions from Peers and MPs. We need legislation which serves society not the egos of the judiciary, not the fee structures of lawyers, civil service agendas.
Great video. Remember the grid itself is a £TRILLIONS and TRILLIONS investment and it needs cashflow. It needs a return on investment, and running costs and emergency teams 247. The grid can make all dirt cheap electricity expensive, extremely expensive. 😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
@incognitotorpedo42 you are confusing grid owners with grid generation owners. One owns billions in assets. The other owns trillions in assets. Most people do not understand this extremely important fact. Both must have cashflow. 247 to spread their ROI, return on investment, over the 8,760 hours per year per customer. Customers are the cashflow. If customers stop taking grid electricity then the cashflow is dead from that customers when the sun shines and sets. 🌞
So is this! People who use more electricity than necessary should pay higher tariffs for the extra, not lower prices. I was under the impression that the goal was to REDUCE consumption, this system encourages profligacy and increases the disparity between rich and poor.
@@harveytheparaglidingchaser7039 So subsidised electricity for Balmoral and other Scottish estates? The ignorance displayd in these comments is astounding!
A simple way of rolling out heat pumps is not to sell them to private homes one by one, but to do a deal with a council to convert all their housing stock, a housing association to convert their housing stock, millions of homes enrolled into heat pump technology in a couple of years, much better than trying to wait for a private home owner to be convinced and ring you up.
Ooh, this is more than genius, more than brilliant ! Encouraging local usage of energy aligns the usage with the minimum electrical resistance path; hence reducing wasting electricity through transmission loss. And 'fan clubs' thats just cool as anything again energy minimization through localization at work, and must be creating enthusiasm amongst consumers for going green. All this is based on the observed emergent physical properties from modeling the system at hand. Yep more than genius. One of the better applications of AI, ChatGPT could not even give me a complete list of tunes Quincy had written, let alone in time order.
My energy supplier in North Carolina is Duke power and they've been adding lots and lots of photovoltaic power capacity, but they don't have _time of day pricing_ for their residential customers! How are we supposed to _make hay when the sun shines_ if they won't give us time of use pricing, or the PV equivalent of the "fan club" in Kraken/Octopus? And we SHOULD be adding lots and lots of wind power because we have tremendously good winds along the North Carolina coast. That's why the Wright Brothers did their testing there. But no, we don't have that either. BOTH problems are INFURIATING!
The trouble is, you need a strong politician (Preferably several) telling them they WILL provide the pricing model "For the good of the population". The 4 year Election Cycle and the "lobby" system makes that "less likely"
My understanding of the system in operation in the UK is that it is designed to ensure that despatchable power is maintained until the renewable grid has been stabilised. When this gets removed there needs to penalties for not supplying sufficient electricity.
We really NEED this guy, an innovator who actually tries to support customers rather than just maximising profit! Scotland could benefit hugely from his ideas … growth growth growth! … Nudge NUDGE Starmer/Reeves!!
Just like all tech companies these have great products when they are building market share. This is true of facebook, google, ebay, amazon etc. Once they have the market share the next phase kicks in which is squeezing the customers for every single penny. This is what private or even public (shares) ownership does. The only solution is government ownership of a small part of the market to set the base price.
Fantastic video, seriously need a smart energy provider in Ireland which is shamefully at least a decade behind the Brits’. I see too many onshore wind turbines forced to stop because the grid management can’t handle a lions share of renewables. 46 cents per kWh while profits since 2021 are higher than ever before is unacceptable
Fabulous interview with Greg Jackson .. I am an Octopus customer with PV panels and a battery. I now think Octopus Heat Pumps are my next step. I can't afford an EV even if I thought that was also the way to go but I drive old cars!👍
Listening to Greg's description of what Kraken can do and the data it holds on every energy consumer gives me the chills. No f*cking thank you. So glad I've refused to have a smart meter installed.
That's a small issue. The big issue is that "Kraken" won't build a nuclear power station or install your heat pump. So if we're mandating net zero, ie shutting down the power system that works, Kraken can't build the replacement and we're screwed.
Hi Dave, big fan of the channel. It has surprised me though that you have not done a segment on bike and e-bike mobility. Massive gains are possible if citizens whose lifestyles permit, transition from cars to bikes for daily transport. If this concept interests you, our team of experts and advocates would be happy to advise! Thank you for all of the amazing content!
120 years ago, in the city of Seattle, the sewer system was built below the level of high tide. As a result, toilets would not work well at high tide, but at low tide they worked well. Parents taught their children to relieve themselves based on the phase of the moon to make everything work better. Eventually, the sewer system and downtown was redesigned so that the sewer would work any time of day, and people could use the toilet whenever they liked. Their is a lesson in there somewhere for what this guy is trying to do.
Great ad for Kraken and Octopus. I hope you get paid well. As any retailer that hasn't been sucked into the SAP black hole will tell you, it doesn't do anything that a myriad of other utility systems don't do. Jackson just happens to be a better sales man than most and more importantly knows the right people.
He needs to get that Dale Vince bloke on. A top bloke and richly deserves his hundred million, earned off our power bills and state subsidies. I reckon he's good for at least 50K. JHAT is worth every penny!
It’s really heartbreaking to see how inflation and recession impact low-income families. The cost of living keeps rising, and many struggle just to meet basic needs, let alone save or invest. It’s a reminder of the importance of finding ways to create financial opportunities. You've helped me a lot sir Brian! Imagine i invested $50,000 and received $190,500 after 14 days
Some persons think inves'tin is all about buying stocks; I think going into the stock market without a good experience is a big risk, that's why I'm lucky to have seen someone like mr Brian C Nelson.
Yes! I'm celebrating £32K stock portfolio today... Started this journey with £3K.... I've invested no time and also with the right terms, now I have time for my family and life ahead of me.
I love smart people who are also ethical.
Sadly, a rare mix. Treasure them when you spot them
@@trueriver1950 I disagree. I think smart people are more likely to be ethical, as they better understand consequences.
They're ethical until they get to monopoly stage. Then they just milk everyone as much as they can. Don't fall for it. Power corrupts people.
Too bad he doesn't understand the environmental hazard wind turbines are... it's almost like he makes money off of them. Oh wait, he does.
@@AKARazorback Let me say this very slowly so it can sink in: Fossil fuels have caused dangerous climate change that is melting the Arctic and Antarctic circles. Any minor damage wind turbines cause is simply a cost we will have to accept.
PLEASE get Greg to pin Miliband down and ask why £22B is better spent doing carbon capture than putting wholesale grid storage out there and trebling the renewables .... then if we have some money left maybe look at carbon capture. So much easier stopping it source.
CO2 isn't a pollutant.
he's probably been bought.
The first day the new conservative government in New Zealand was in session they cancelled a pumped hydro project that would have stored all our renewable energy and announced the repeal of bans on the exploration for oil and gas and mining for coal in conservation estates and cancelled tax incentives for EVs and disincentives for large ICE powered vehicles.
The New Zealand government is currently owned by Big Oil and Big Tobacco
Just because money was announced as being spent on CCS technology, doesn't mean the govt aren't spending in other areas of the energy grid to reduce or eliminate CO2e emissions.
No singular direction will achieve the targets in the desired timeframe. Taking a wide-angled approach and spreading investments across various sectors of the industry will achieve goals quicker.
Other investments that haven't been broadcast include;
32.9m in the development of energy storage technology
11m+ in smart energy systems
1.5bn in green infrastructure
240m into the evolving hydrogen sector
160m in port infrastructure for off-shore wind
630m to improve energy efficiency measures for new-builds and low-income households.
These are all investment projects that have been initialised in the last 4 years
Carbon capture is a scam, it will never work so we shouldn't waste money on it
Because CCS is the preferred "solution" of the oil and gas industry, who have better lobbyists and more power.
Brilliant, simply brilliant. Global Energy and Strategy CEO
One important reason for regional pricing would be that it puts a price tag on NIMBYism. You don't want local windmills or solar ? OK, pay more for your power since your region has a power deficit.
That is a great point. Incentives, or in this case perhaps disincentives, are the key to get any change through and done.
@@blackbaron0yep. entirely logical
As a German living in Bavaria I say: hell, yeah! NIMBYism is really going rampart here and we need to do something about it. This idea sounds like a good solution!
@@haderlumpi Another mechanism would be to make network charges relative to the distance, i.e. local electricity will be cheaper. With current schemes, you pay the same whether the power plant is your neighbor, or all across the country.
Yes, yes, yes!
Although I think people who live near wind farms should get some small one time compensation - but cheaper power when it's windy is an excellent idea!
He obviously has a technical background and understands these electrical systems. Our electrical providers in my area used to have technical people in management back in the early 1960s. However, it has changed with the takeover by lawyers, PR people, bean counters, and political class members who fundamentally don't understand how the grid works. Our utilities don't want solar or batteries they don't own and act accordingly.
For example, the Secretary of Energy in the US is an ex-beauty pageant winner with a non-stem education through Harvard Law. Nowhere in her CV are there indications that she has enough technical knowledge to understand energy system dynamics or nuclear weapons (also in her job description).
A management rule: You can't rationally manage what you don't understand, but you can cause failure.
"For example, the Secretary of Energy in the US is an ex-beauty pageant winner with a non-stem education .... "
That will change if Harris wins.
Calling her out for having won a beauty pageant in HIGHSCHOOL is a bit sexist to say the least. Yes she is unqualified in terms of a meritocracy and seemingly has no knowledge or background in energy; but labeling her as a pageant winner to discount her ability or intelligence is incredibly unfair. If she was truly unfit we'd see something like trumps sec of education Betsy devos
@@thartwig I was trying to point out that her background was orthogonal to understanding energy. There is nothing wrong with a beauty pageant, but it is of no help in understanding the dynamics of an electrical grid where the supply and demand must always balance within milliseconds.
This is dystopian.
@@tarstarkuszyet here we are 😢
Love it when someone I used to work with does well. Despite working in a big global corporation Greg was always a different person than most others. Well done Greg, keep it up..👏👏👏
The electric companies in the USA puts heavy fees on people to hook up solar of wind. They charge you 3 times the amount at peak vs off peak. This makes it almost not worth doing it. The electric companies put restrictions on where you put the solar panels where the peak usage during the summer and don't let you put them where they will feed the grid off peak. So you would have to have two separate systems. One for peak and another to charge a battery bank to supplement when you can't produce enough to cover your usage. This greatly increases the cost and complexity of your system. This companies ideas could help if the electric companies go along with it. They don't make high profits from people with solar and wind connected to the grid unless they can't produce enough to cover their usage. The solar companies will not install enough panels on your roof to guarantee you can produce more than you use. The electric companies will not let them!
Can you select between tariffs from different electricity companies? If so, all companies force these restrictions?
@gerbre1 You normally don't get a choice that I am aware of. The electric companies have areas they service due to where they place their utility polls. Where you live determines who services your home. In new construction areas where different electric companies are close, it may be possible to have a choice?
Don't even connect to the grid. I am just going to spend about $2000, instead of $30,000 and just put a portable system on my roof and feed it to the major energy users in my house. My 3 fridges/freezer, and computers and TV's. I have an open basement and access through the floor. They use the most energy and you can just run extension cords to a few locations and then use automatic transfer switches to switch back to the grid when your solar and battery are depleted. Diverts automatically back to solar in the morning when the sun comes up. I can't justify an expensive solar system since I currently get some of the cheapest electricity in North America and my bill is less than $100 CAD per month now. In Florida electrical costs are absurd and my house there regularly uses $400 USD. I have no room for solar on my roof since I have a solar water heating setup for my pool.
My home in Canada uses A/C from May to Sept and that does use a lot of energy , so I will have to investigate how to supply it with solar as well. It takes 220 volts.
@gerbre1 I am not aware of any electric company in the USA that doesn't have the extra fees associated with connecting renewable resources to the grid. They loose money or can't control the excess energy being added to the grid. If they implement battery storage like Tesla did in Australia maybe we could get legislation to prevent them from robbing us? They already pay drastically less for what they buy compared to what they sell. It's a legal monopoly and they lobby the government to keep their shady business practices alive.
@jeffguarino2097 unfortunately if you are already connected they will fine you for not connecting!!!! How this is legal I don't know? I have land elsewhere that I will be off grid and there is no current electricity polls. I just hope they can't force you to connect when they do put them in. I know I could just run one circuit to power a light bulb but it's still $50 a month to be hooked up!
I did not know about Kraken, so thank you. They are on the right track. Some of your videos expose speculative technologies that may never pay off, but this is the opposite! I will definitely keep my eyes on this one.
He was also interviewed by the Everything Electric Show.
🔥🔥🔥 просто огонь. Интеллектуальная динамическая логистика - один из базовых ключей к быстрому переходу на 100% clean energy: PV, battery, EV, heat pumps, thermal isolation, recuperation on heat exchangers, + this energy logistics
Amazing what can be done when the customer base is not viewed as cows to be milked.
Yes, the axioms of a perfect free market are altruist capitalists and well informed smart consumers. The world is ideal if evil does not exist, an obvious statement.
Are you sure about that? Octopus' operation requires far more privacy violation than Google.
@@aniksamiurrahman6365 google just wants your information to sell it to others, whereas operation octopus wants that information to tailor the grids' operation to its usage.
And, at least in Italy, are also far from being cheap
the very best farmers look out for the health of their cows...but they are most certainly still milked
Another issue that is not being talked about enough is the standing charge fiasco/ rip off. As a small charity, who own a building we have had a new 3 phase power supply installed. Initially we were going for 54KVA, but the engineer changed it to 69 kVA to 'future proof' us, e.g, for car charger, heat pumps, as well as a small 'commercial standard' kitchen for a community cafe. Our standing charge moved from £1.30 a day to £12 a day, that is at £4400 a year, more than our total electricity use prior to the new kitchen. I hear numerous horror stories of small business es getting stitched up like this. i contacted the government and that agree something is arwy, responding 'The Government recognises that too much of the burden of the bill is placed on standing charges. Ofgem has recently published a further discussion paper on standing charges, this includes some specific measures which may result in changes to standing charges for some groups of consumers.' however it isn't enough to stop this rip off. we are getting a 24 KW PV array for our roof, but that won't mitigate the standing charge rip off.
I would sue the electrician, it's like he sold you into this nightmare, ask him to build it back and upgrade when necessary
The reason for engaging an engineer is to avoid these pitfalls so he has failed his obligation so you don't need to pay him. (Yes, the argument stands up in Court).
I agree stepping from 54 to 69 shouldn't multiply your bill by 10 so yes, Gov't needs to step in!
You were miss sold! No doubt about it sue them now! Don't wait!
So sorry to hear that. Standing charges are far far too high indeed! Especially for our small businesses that's insane!
Notice that "local prices" may create massive inequalities to the point of injustice, if it happens that poor areas ends with more expensive power than rich ones for instance...
rich and poor 'areas' are the symptom of 'injustice' being well and alive
I really like your channel - none of the hate filled politicisation of our global warming challenge. Just good insights into technologies etc that will hopefully get us out of this predicament!
Decentralized is fine. Commodified and deregulated is not.
Why would we want expensive energy? Commoditized cheap solar panels and related equipment would bring about decentralization.
Deregulated mean less expance for You to obtain energy, because it's provider pay less to meet this regulations, inspections and etc. If business wish to be more than fast pased one time scam than it not interrested in fooling You and because it need stable and prefferably growing client base it will work to be at least good enough for You, because otherwise You go to thier competitors.
And precisely there in play enter commodification, because now You actually got a choice and can vote with Your wallet. Can You if energy generation monopolized by government? No. Is it good thou? No. And I have enough examples.
I found that many in Europe, including UK, and USA somehow got sickness called "socialism"... It just don't work. There no any good wizard which solve Your problem for free and least of all it do governmental authority. My country lost because of this sickness millions of people dead and traumatized rest of us. Just don't. Only "social" we need it is exactly by interpreneurs like in this video and people which support them. Any authority just destroying those ties. Be wise.
@@jackson8085 Not talking about solar panels. I am concerned that commoditization of kWh creates perverse incentives that drive up the marginal costs of energy during peak. You can’t store electricity the same way you store grain. You have to transform it to another form of energy first. So someone somewhere has to have a responsibility for maintaining grid reliability for the few hours of the year with the highest demand. Higher prices don’t always do the trick, because generators aren’t guaranteed a return on their investment if they never run the generator. Traditional utilities solved this by rate basing capital investment with a regulatory apparatus to make sure they are properly planning and aren’t gouging customers. CA and TX experimentation with deregulation has been mixed with a lot of costs being passed on to consumers with lower reliability. Maybe there is a path forward that can maintain reliable electric service and ensure consumers aren’t gouge while still being decentralized, but I haven’t seen it yet. Personally, I believe public and cooperative power must play a role in securing electricity as a service and basic human right rather than electricity being commodified and sold to the highest bidder.
regulated means safe to use and cheap. Deregulated means monopoly. This company builds trust right now and is cheap. When they get to monopoly phase they will milk every penny out of its customers pockets they can.
Either they should have competition or be heavily regulated by then.
@Adrian_kal disagree, because I live in country in which it used for forced businesses takeover and actual racketeering of it. Current system provoke negative selection to governmental institutions. Only real regulation are needed is arbitration to prevent uncompetitive actions, but in reality biggest businesses anyway put thier cronies everywhere or make some.
Law mast be one for anyone. As long as it true than most regulations are useless. Customer must think for what he/she actually pay money. This is why it is dumb when russians start to post videos where they use Ipads as kitchen board "in a protest" to Apple - they already pay for it so what they doing with Ipad and etc. just mean nothing. And if You not pay to some company via buying thier stuff - it is only and most powerful regulation. As long as customer use critical thinking - any regulation useless. I understand that on practice it amputated by educational system and popular culture, but it is also a problem.
Regulations are just a way You give up Your responsibility on government and in many cases it not interested in Your or other citizen standards of living even if on paper must be so. Any system can be abused. And allways it abused from inside.
I went looking for Octopus in the US just the other day and so this episode is timely indeed!
Thank you for quality programming. What you are describing here is accurate - the flight to safety to the US stock market and dollar. This is what is keeping the market going at this time and preventing a crash. This "melt UP" phase will go on for a while, then as the global economy crashes so will US markets only harder due to the "No Win scenario" that has been created by so much obscene debt. Next comes the "Default Phase" with mega-massive bankruptcies and lastly "Asset Seizures" where banks and the Fed government will simply declare an extreme national emergency to justify the crisis and debit your account directly. The fools will think that this could never happen. The actual legislation for this type of action is already in place. My advice to anyone feeling the heat in this inflation, just trade long term more than ever, I have made over 370k from day trading with Leasie Aiken in few weeks, this is one of the best medium to backup your assets incase it goes bearish.
She's mostly on Telegrams, using the user name
LeasieAiken
We steadfast believer in Leasie Aiken because she is always right on the money.
Leasie Aiken knows her stuff! Her advice have been invaluable to my trading journey. Definitely worth giving a shot!
This is exactly what Big time investors are talking about, not just you. key thing here is to always trades with a good strategy even if the price goes up or down.
I live in Italy, I abandoned methane completely, two years ago. I would like to try this services, before for my house, and after for my condominium, that has some solar panels and heat pump. The potential of this approach is immense!
Wow, I just wanna scream how awesome this is from the rooftops. Very cool!
You could post the video on your social media every day for a week?
It’s such a pity that octopus aren’t in Northern Ireland. I live in the Antrim hills & we have a similar density of wind energy as Scotland. However a lot of it is shut down at the weekend due to a stubborn & outdated grid owner.
There’s actually 3000 farmers here who have planning permission for a single turbine on their farms but only 1000 ever got a grid connection.
We really need a disruptor like Octopus to shake the whole thing up.
Ironically Octopus makes its heat pumps in Belfast.
I’ve been an Octopus customer for 3 years. I’ve got the lot, solar, home battery, heat pump, EV, Electroverse card, Intelligent Octopus Go tariff and a Smart meter that has hardly worked in the last 12 months. Unfortunately the one thing I can’t touch, the one thing I am totally reliant on Octopus to fix is broken and Octopus don’t seem capable of fixing it. Great ideas but they also need to get the basics right or time of use tariffs just won’t work.
Hmmm, that’s a bit off….
You mean the smart meter doesn't work? That can simply be the signal to the station is too weak, depending on distance. It's affecting loads of smart meters across the country.
@lettersquash The smart meter did work for a couple of years, then stopped nearly 12 months ago. Octopus have changed the meter and comms hub but can't get it talking to the DCC. Nothing has changed at our end. If signal strength is a problem it's not changed at our end.
@@andybury7639 have the Octopus team been in touch with you?
Are they communicating with you, the customer?
@@andybury7639 It sounds like It isn't the smart meter that's not working, but the display in your house. ( You can't run an Octopus Go tariff without it). Like you we have the full house of electrical options. and like you are on Octopus. Our display unit is also f***ed - although to be fair to Octopus it was even before we moved our contract to them. I tend to use my Solar system, provider's app (Sunsync) to monitor what's going on.
I personally like that while Octopus invested in their own heat pump, they understood that they didn't have the technical maturity to make their product viable in a meaningful timeframe, so they diversified and made a very smart investment in Kensa Group. That's smart.
I've been interested in the regional energy pricing initiative since I heard of it. For me it was an instant bottom line boost for all the hospitals, schools, and every other public sector building. Even the MOD would benefit. The fact that we still have a system that actually forces prices to rise and national suppliers cut the production, while energy from international suppliers are used and paid for at the higher price, isn't just stupid, it's shameful.
This was your best episode yet!!! Please investigate it more regarding how it might work in the USA and where the key stakeholders are on this concept. Well done.
In the UK, generation supply & billing are provided by separate companies, we only deal with the billing company & there is competition. As I understand it in most States you have a monolithic monopoly generation/supply/billing company & there is no competition - your State has to change that, at your next election select a Representative who _will_ change it (I expect the Green Party is the most likely in your State).
A good step is to get on a 100% green energy plan from your provider. It puts you money to work and they can budget for cleaner grid improvements much easier.
“Outstanding service at fair prices”
Yes. Everything works brilliantly. Electroverse also works really well abroad, just used mine in Portugal.
Here in Italy octopus Is arrived, and Is definitely cheaper then competitors, with finally clear bills. It's a breath of fresh air (infact i am a very satisfied customer).
It's been in Spain for a few months - here the state regulations for selling renewable energy back to the Grid that were intended to be the minimum acceptable within the EU have become the standard. It was impossible to find a company that behaved decently to it's customers - I now get credited for all electricity my solar panels feed back into the Grid. And, if I expand my system (which was a stupid idea, financially, before) I get a more generous rate for electricity fed back in.
Excellent content, just switched to Octopus over here in New Zealand. Bring it on.
Has it solved the problem of what you lot do to sheep?
@@tilapiadave3234no. They generally eat them.
@@timwhite8500 Not what I know about new Zealanders that love sheep in pink bikini's ,,, red lipstick etc
@@timwhite8500 Sheep shaggers ,,, hmmmm
A lot of very smart ideas. Refreshing to see. Like always the government bureaucracy and vested interests are the road blocks
I was working in the IT department of one of the behemoths when smart meters were being rolled out. Quite a few of us thought "Hey, with some clever software and appropriate half-hourly import and export tariffs, you could add a household battery and turn domestic households into energy trading hubs".... He actually did it!
I've never really understood how that, or the plan of having people's cars being made available to suck energy out of can really benefit people - it seems more like a means of control. Can you imagine being able to cut off power to whole sections of people you don't like or who are causing problems ( well, that one might be useful in some cases - but it is a political move, not a economic one )
@@justgivemethetruth you're imagining things that are irrelevant, the state already has the physical ability to cut you off or force you to do anything, but it doesn't because of the rule of law.
Even better if you could have a smart meter with an integrated wallet capable of executing contracts.
@@willkinmont611Smart meters aren't there to improve supplies, they're there so you can be cut off when it's decided you're using more than approved by the government.
@ I’m assuming you got your electrical engineering degree from facebook? Idiot.
Thank you for your insight and this new opportunity to learn about these renewable power grids and the efficiency of them with lower costs!💜🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼♥️
Get back to me when electricity actually DOES come down in price. It's only been a month since they went up - AGAIN.
Thanks!
Thanks for your support. Much appreciated :-)
“Scotland will be the cheapest in Europe” - Octopus Energy.
“Not having that!” - Westminster.
OMG you are so, SO right. My fellow Scots need to get their act together!
It's time we declared our energy independence. Cheapest energy in Europe though not necessarily when you need it. Maybe buy a generator before they sell out.
Labour needs to talk this man!
This man is smart and knows how to work....they won't call him.
The only energy boss who agreed to be questioned by Martin Lewis live, top man!
Imagine if we had an "Energy Task Force" headed by those 2 with REAL power to demand change?
I'm surprised Dale Vince (Ecotricity) wasn't included, he likes a bit of media attention
This is exactly what is needed to run the future, although vulnerability to attack is a big concern !
" If you found this video useful and informative.." - I did, but also a bit to suspiciously positive and lacking a bit of scrutiny.
Yeah, I'm not putting my hope for our energy transition in a millionaire. They are responsible for it happening so slowly to begin with.
@@danilooliveira6580 So every human with over a million is equivalently evil, and technology has nothing to do with it? Sorry, not buying that.
@@danilooliveira6580😂 Really.
Send him to America. We like millionaires and billionaires who can do things..
You are obviously not an Octopus customer
@@BALANCEDPORTFOLIO So what's that supposed to mean.
The rabbit hole of consumer renewables started for me in lockdown. Then the view was solar was the starting point. Four years later I'd say that Storage should be the starting point for anyone going down this path.
At a national level it's blatantly clear that Storage is the missing factor in the equation. Switching off a wind farm should be a crime.
At a domestic level we have more EVs sitting on driveways that could be balancing the grid but very few cars have bidirectional charging.
Greg's doing great work but the ignorance(and/or corruption) of politicians will always hold back progress.
which is why voting is a serious undertaking & why we have to monitor our politicians to ensure they deserve repeated votes. Any level of corruption should immediately strike them off your list of available candidates for the next vote.
Storage isn't actually _missing_ it's just in short supply, for instance lots of pumped-storage hydro was put in when they started building nuclear because British reactors run at a steady output but the demand varies enormously.
@@alanhat5252 Disappointing to see that Milliband is taking 'Independent' advice from a company that he owns.
Let's put the pumped storage myth to bed. It's enormously expensive and we've only got the geography to supply etopia for a day or so, and that's if you drown the populated parts of the Scottish Highlands. Google "Red John Hydro" and then do the numbers yourself, imagine building 500 of these pumped storage behemoths for a three days of electricity. Pump storage only works in concert with short term fluctuations in demand and supply. And it's still cheaper than batteries.
Here's what works. Diesel generators. As our renewables powered grid falls on it's arse more and more these things will start popping up all over the place. The most polluting form of energy, save coal, expensive and in a World of Diesel scarcity... Well this isn't going to end well.
Make this guy energy minister
As electricity is 15.68% of total Uk energy and octopus is just a percentage of electricity and won't be disrupting energy at all but increasing demand for electric goods I saw this as a paid advertisement and don't think that wise.
Electrification of transport, domestic heat and industrial heat is going to change that @@antonyjh1234
@@antonyjh1234yeap...probably most of the coments on the line "Oh Greg is such a genius" are just bots paid by this scammer who can't even fool my drunk uncle...he haven't had any revolutionary idea, the whole sell-speech was "AI, machine learning, Greg is Einstein" ffs please save your bu11sh1t...I'll stop to follow this dumb channel
@@antonyjh1234 Which is a good thing, as electricity generation in the UK has become one of the lower CO₂ emitters compared to other energy-generating sectors. More of this please.
The diagram / animation at 12:00 is such a quick powerful argument. The National Grid numbers on "I am Kate" explain and plot the role of different providers.
Ye are always interesting and informative - but in my opinion, this week's episode was outstanding - particularly superb in terms of positivity and ''can do' thinking". Hope others will take the example, and spread this progress worldwide.
I know cars have bigger batteries and hence the focus on their use in balancing the grid. However, we don’t have a BEV yet but we do have a home battery but I can’t use it in this process. Why? We charge it 8-12kwhrs per day which is more than my son’s BEV uses each week! I pay more for my electricity than my son does! And yes I am an Octopus customer.
That doesn't sound right. A typical electric car goes about 4 miles per kWh, so 10kWh would convert to about 40 miles per week, or only about 6 miles a day, or 2000 miles a year. That's about a quarter of the UK national average or 20 miles a day.
If your son drove the average amount, he'd need about 5kWh per day, so he'd still be using about half as much as a typical house.
@ Badly worded. Sorry. I meant that my weekly total is more than my son’s weekly total.
We're so lucky to have Greg Jackson. Let's hope the Labour govt (Ed Miliband I'm looking at you) builds on its energy pledges and seriously reforms the electricity market and grid connection fiasco - otherwise the whole thing is going nowhere. I'm sure Greg will keep the pressure on, but we need action, FAST!
Electricity is around 20% of the modern worlds energy use, a 100% renewable electricity grid is only 20% of the problem fixed, this is a show to make you think overall progress is being made
@@antonyjh1234 this is true which is why building a bigger grid and switching more use to via electricity is critical (eg EVs, heat pumps etc). Some sectors face big challenges such as aviation, shipping and some industries though. These can't always use electricity directly and alternatives like hydrogen or SAF etc are still problematic.
@@jonmoore176 I get the idea, in a simple world great but the energy and emissions need to be cut now.
You are not understanding the mechanics of oil, we get 6000 products from a single barrel, it's refined by heat, off comes gas first, petrol, diesel and all the other 5997 products, last is asphalt. If you want item number 3178 you will get all the others too, of you want asphalt for cars to drive on, you need oil.
Action preferably today! NOW!
@@antonyjh1234 - and yet many in the oil dependant industries are actively working on alternatives to fossil-fuel sources, as they are aware the world is moving away from it and there is oppurtunity to be had in producing alternative sourced products; particularly as fossil-fuels are a finite resource. Asphalt being one example with the industry moving to repair, replace, recycle basis using bio binders rather than oil based feed stocks.
Very interesting. Shared. (UK Resident).
Using the bespoke EV charge schedule to optimize the grid is absolutely ingenious and likely saves a tremendous amount of load balancing.
And all we have to do is completely remodel the local electrical grid. And hope that people can afford cars that have sufficient battery capacity. And we don't run out of minerals while this is happening.
But perhaps we should get this system in place before abolishing the old school system
.
@colinmacdonald5732 they are doing this grid balancing through car charging timing right now to more efficiently balance the grid. No infrastructure needed so far.
This just saves money and havingto fire up more gas turbines.
If the EVs are on the grid, is it not a good idea to charge the vehicles at the optimal time most convenient to the grid operator to save money and reduce peak demand???
this 'Think' is so valuable. We've has a lot of back and forth with our NV Energy about the whys and wherefores of their decisions. This will allow us to ask about and research where they are in reference to Kraken and in comparison to Octopus. Thanks you for this valuable research and sharing!
Naming your software "Kraken" is a stroke of genius. You get to go "Release the Kraken!" before every release.
I have to say the "Fan Club" is absolutely ingenious.
I'm with Octopus Energy, for what it's worth. They're certainly pretty competitive in their pricing givern the system they function within . But I think its Greg's bigger ideas that could drive real intelligent change.
So brilliant and unfortunately hamstrung by the bureaucracy of entrenched power brokers. All the best to you and your efforts.
EDIT: re-posted because TH-cam deleted my first comment for some reason.
This is a really interesting video! I'd genuinely like to learn more about how Kraken makes the introduction of renewable energy generation to the grid easier or more likely. The impression I get from your video is that Octopus Energy, thanks to Kraken, has been steadily eating away the market share of Britain's older energy companies. And they do that by optimization of the grid, which somehow leads to lower electricity prices for the consumer.
In Alberta where I live, we've had privatized electricity and natural gas since the 1990's, so it sounds like our market is similar to Britain's in that respect. We can choose different suppliers, but they all charge the same prices. And we've had steadily rising prices for electricity over the last thirty years, with absolutely no discounts. Supposedly the provincial government wants 30% of electricity to come from renewables by 2030, but you can tell their heart isn't in it. Right now about 40% of our electricity comes from natural gas and 40% from coal, and all they really want to do is replace most of the coal with gas. Maybe some of coal's old share of the market would be replaced by solar or wind, but natural gas would still be king here well into the 2050's.
It would be freaking incredible if some electricity company could arm themselves with Kraken and change that. We need the same kind of change and grid optimization that Britain is doing, along with the introduction of more renewable sources of energy. It would give the government a collective case of heartburn to see their carefully planned cartel upset by a private operator!
It's the same with Uk, of the carbon intensity gas is currently 82% of generation.
Solar and wind haven't cracked 10% of electricity since Friday and electricity is 16% of total energy, so renewables in this case are less than 1% of total energy from them.
There is nothing being achieved here overall and nothing achievable will happen with renewables before societal change from the lack of oil happens.
“We show in the paper that the amount of copper needed is essentially impossible for mining companies to produce.”
"The researchers examined 120 years of global data from copper production dating back to 1900. They then modelled how much copper is likely to be produced for the rest of the century and how much copper the US electricity infrastructure and fleet of cars would need to upgrade to renewable energy.
The study found that renewable energy’s copper needs would outstrip what copper mines can produce at the current rate. Between 2018 and 2050, the world will need to mine 115% more copper than has been mined in all of human history up until 2018 just to meet current copper needs without considering the green energy transition.
To meet the copper needs of electrifying the global vehicle fleet, as many as six new large copper mines must be brought online annually over the next several decades. About 40% of the production from new mines will be required for EV-related grid upgrades."
I don’t know the details but if you have a look at what Octopus are doing in Texas, it might give you some idea & some hope…
@@antonyjh1234I don't know why you're looking at copper, most high-power wiring is aluminium & overhead lines are aluminium over steel & have been for many decades. (Also, most copper supply is recycled material not mined).
Not only was this video an insightful look at how the grid could be improved thru "single pane of glass" management, but it also illustrates why our legacy system is preventing a rapid, much needed switch to cheaper & healthier renewables.
We humans have had other encounters with the existential need to change quickly or perish, and we are the descendants of those who did. Especially those who survived the last ice age. So, we CAN do this but the public has to wake up and smell the coffee. Stop electing politicians who will keep tapping on the brakes to please their big donors, the NIMBY's and the Luddites.
We need to implement change with some urgency or suffer miserably when our planet crosses some climate tipping points that lie just a mile or so down the road...
On the surface that energy auction looks a bit handicapped. Why are they paying the price of the most expensive energy to everyone? Completely unnecessary distribution of wealth to the providers, while hamstringing the transition because electricity is too expensive. Sounds like the carbon trading boondoggle, make something good (cap) a lot worse (trade). It's almost literally the same as price fixing. People just don't see when they are being fleeced by the collective of businesses, do they, globally. Or call it corruption hidden behind basic math.
The decentralization of the auction penalizes the energy hogs by region, which is the right idea, but still a bit of a broad brush. Also it favors the producers again, because in a smaller area, you have fewer bids so higher likelihood of a high cost bid that then everyone gets paid. AI just take over already.
Why are they paying the price of the most expensive energy to everyone?
Because this way they are incentivized to get their price as low as possible to be part of the group that gets to sell anything. So the price will be as low as it can possibly be.
If you pay them what they are asking, the cheaper operators are now incentivized get their price to just below the cut of. So best case you end up in the same place we are now.
Fabulous forward thinking, I’d given up on backwards Britain! Now theirs hope 😮😊😊😊
The soothing music of Richard Wagner, there you go.
2:20 Kraken isn't an operating system... delivery platform yes, operating system no.
"An operating system is system software that manages computer hardware and software resources, and provides common services for computer programs" - Wikipedia.
Brilliant to the point and a lot of working in there to edit that down to a concise short video.
Love this man and don't begrudge him his millions £££. I like Greg Jackson too... 😉
Great Video
I'm going to research further into that Octopus 70°C Heatpump that I wasn't previously aware of.
Thanks for bringing some positive news!
What a joker!
2 weeks ago, a friend of mine recommended Octopus energy here in Spain and after seeing this video, i'm definitely going to make the switch.
I don't know the workings of either Kraken, or Tesla's Autobidder, but they seem to be solving similar things (or at least aspects of the same problems). Curious to know in what ways they overlap, and how they differ.
We're cutting our carbon footprint quite nicely, mainly through substituting coal with Gas and woodchips. We've also "exported" much of carbon footprint to China whose coal fired economy supplies our consumer goods.
Best of all, our high energy prices are shrinking the real economy, but we're not noticing because the economy is switching to the bloated public sector, a civil servant working from home on his laptop doesn't have quite the same carbon footprint as someone building a marine engine or a transformer. But our wealth depends on real economic activity not paper pushers so we get poorer.
China’s economy isn’t “coal fired”
I bet Greg would agree that the only thing holding us back… is monopolistic, mammon-grubbing greed.
Yeah I am shocked! 😂
You just know they will tax and regulate away any oportunity!
So it's good then we can have people coming in and disrupting things, like Greg Jackson
The set of incentives within the economic structure we have lead inevitably to expansion and concentrating power in a hierarchy. Concentrated power attracts the greediest, most narcissistic people in the population and rewards lies. Voting is a popularity contest based on convincing people, not providing actual evidence of competency and morals. Some sort of real competition, a leader obstacle course that proves competency wouldn't be too hard, but proving ethics is hard. Brain scans during some long complicated stressful situation? Gotta be moral puzzles, teaching techniques in old zen poems, to put people in the right state of mind for the scan. I don't know, we're a long way from brain mastery.
@@HoboGardenerBenso you need to refine your voting practices (perhaps attend, film & comment on hustings?)
@@alanhat5252 Why would I do that? My comment is about how human nature makes voting on a large scale total bullshit at the core. Why would I waste my time and energy on a system I see as deeply, irrevocably flawed? My whole point was it is an absurdity and we should try to fundamentally redesign it, but that can't happen within the flawed voting system, we need a completely different approach.
I guess the grid bureaucrats are apprehensive believing that Jackson wants to run when he has only just learned to start walking. He has a good sales pitch, but I can't help thinking he may be oversimplifying based upon best case scenarios. Hopefully he has got his risk management ducks all lined up & he will be able to deliver on his innovative ideas.
A lot of very smart and hopeful people work there to help him.
Bring it on Greg! It's hard to get worked up about an energy company but Octopus are the best I've dealt with in fifty years. They do occasionally get stuff wrong but it gets fixed.
I get cheap electicity to charge my car and house battery overnight, great export rates for my solar panels, discount on away from home charging via Elecroverse and suspect I will go for the Octopus heat pump solution in the next year.
In fact I sell excess from my panels and effectively buy it back cheaper overnight. Using the grid as a battery.
Regarding the present method of national bidding and pricing, if we had regional pricing and affordable energy then maybe we wouldnt need winter fuel allowances which, whilst it was paid to pensioners, was effectively going straight to the energy companies. Just a thought.
Finally, on the subject of the videos, I find some of the pulsing light coloured graphics a bit hard on the eye.
Keep up the good work
Meanwhile the poorest have to pay the highest tariffs, upfront for all their electricity, only able to 'top up' at the local shop (if its open). Additionally living in rented homes without insulation, batteries or EVs. What a wonderfully caring society..
Cheap electric?
It was cheap 3 years ago and it has nearly tripled since then. You’re a very funny person.
Electricity, not energy, 15.68% of energy is electricity and plastic for the ev comes from the same barrel diesel does, they are refined off at the same time, so more ev's means more diesel as waste, do you think they store this diesel or sell it?
Not sure what percentage of overall electricity octopus are but even if they took it all it would only be 16% of energy, with all the added energy that would still be produced none of this is about reducing consumption
Nothing of this was anything but a paid advert for more overall consumption, I think the channel should be ashamed of what they are trying to do here.
While every bit of renewable you have been able to afford it has not lowered consumption, something that is supposed to halve in the next five years, this is more trade dressed up as efficiency.
I personally think we will be back to horses sooner than even a quarter of current vehicles being ev's, but again all that plastic, has an amount of diesel, petrol, propane.
@@Vile_Entity_3545 On occasion EV users get paid to take electricity from the grid at night! The rich and profligate are being rewarded for using excess electricity, by attracting cheaper tariffs for their internet controlled devices and EVs. Meanwhile the poorest can't afford to charge their electricity keys upfront at the (local) shop, even if its open, and live in the least insulated houses. The system is totally iniquitous!
@@antonyjh1234 - and yet EV automakers are aware of the plastic dependencies, increasing the amount of recycled plastics used in their cars to reduce oil dependency. Then there is the plastic industry itself moving to alternative resource stock sources, which are ramping up. So whilst at this point there is a dependency chain on fossil-fuels this is not going to be always the case. One cannot switch overnight from a resource that has been exploited for decaded but it is happening. Your choice is either to be part of this journey or sit in the dark moaning about it without aiding any solution.
This guy sounds fantastic
I do have a problem with cars, any car. They are such a wasteful thing,1.5 ton of materials, for something that at very most has two people in it, is parked in a space of some sort at least 60% of its time. They should be unbelievably expensive to buy and run no matter how they are powered. Public transport needs the money not metal rubber and glass for a few people a few hours a day.
Using Octopus Energy in Germany since 2022 💪👋
Great topic and video. Keep up the great work.
That is amazing, well done. I had no idea that integrated software existed in the generation and utilization of electricity!
it's amazing what the dumb sheep don't get told 😢
Very interesting video Dave !
Now informed about their heat pumps. Thanks for vid
High temperature heat pumps maybe easier to install, but they lead to much higher bills than low temperature ones. Instead of 400% efficient it's more3like 300%. Where the cost3of gas electricity means you need them3to hit 350% to break even.
@@Lewis_Standing, he said the difference was the 10% added cost to operate them; you're talking about a 25% difference.
The grid must be nationalised again. It should never have been sold.
The grid is a nationalised system. It's about the only thing not sold off!
@ National Grid Plc is a publicly traded company. The grid is privately owned.
Making money with good principles, good job octopus
'Good priciples'. Are you alright?
@Humanity101-zp4sq moving away from fossil fuels isn't a good principle ? Are you alright ?
@@motorheadmaximus Not if it leads to impoverishment of the most vulnerable, no. Fossil fuels are simply short term stores of earthly carbon. Liberating them back to the atmosphere and the environment in general is cyclical. The problem is not resource use, its resource exploitation and profligacy.
Well done on growing the channel Dave nice job 🎉
Great as always Octopus has brilliant smart solutions.
One of the few tech companies I’d quite like to work for 👍
Can this guy re-write legislation and design efficient public services? The Post Office Inquiry has been revealing the decades horrendous behaviours, but even worse things are going on in other public service fiefdoms. A civil service/agencies/NHS/planning revolution is needed. The National Audit Office, Parliament are useless as people like the Post Office executives lie to Parliamentary Committees and to direct questions from Peers and MPs. We need legislation which serves society not the egos of the judiciary, not the fee structures of lawyers, civil service agendas.
Great video.
Remember the grid itself is a £TRILLIONS and TRILLIONS investment and it needs cashflow.
It needs a return on investment, and running costs and emergency teams 247.
The grid can make all dirt cheap electricity expensive, extremely expensive.
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
I think you're overestimating the cost of the grid. At any rate, the grid is a fixed cost. If you get cheaper electric generation, it's still cheaper.
@incognitotorpedo42 you are confusing grid owners with grid generation owners.
One owns billions in assets.
The other owns trillions in assets.
Most people do not understand this extremely important fact.
Both must have cashflow. 247 to spread their ROI, return on investment, over the 8,760 hours per year per customer.
Customers are the cashflow.
If customers stop taking grid electricity then the cashflow is dead from that customers when the sun shines and sets. 🌞
That was so interesting. The current pricing policy is ridiculous
So is this! People who use more electricity than necessary should pay higher tariffs for the extra, not lower prices. I was under the impression that the goal was to REDUCE consumption, this system encourages profligacy and increases the disparity between rich and poor.
@Humanity101-zp4sq lower prices for Scotland and Wales where incomes are lower
@@harveytheparaglidingchaser7039 So subsidised electricity for Balmoral and other Scottish estates? The ignorance displayd in these comments is astounding!
A simple way of rolling out heat pumps is not to sell them to private homes one by one, but to do a deal with a council to convert all their housing stock, a housing association to convert their housing stock, millions of homes enrolled into heat pump technology in a couple of years, much better than trying to wait for a private home owner to be convinced and ring you up.
Or just make them mandatory for new builds...
Great segment! It’s these kind of innovations we desperately need.
If in US, do what I did and vote for Harris, so we don’t go back! 💙💙💙🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
You've gone back, best of luck.
My favorite ‘Chinese curse quote’ ❤️😎😁… the rest of the curse goes: ‘and may you get what you wish for ‘
Ooh, this is more than genius, more than brilliant ! Encouraging local usage of energy aligns the usage with the minimum electrical resistance path; hence reducing wasting electricity through transmission loss. And 'fan clubs' thats just cool as anything again energy minimization through localization at work, and must be creating enthusiasm amongst consumers for going green.
All this is based on the observed emergent physical properties from modeling the system at hand. Yep more than genius. One of the better applications of AI, ChatGPT could not even give me a complete list of tunes Quincy had written, let alone in time order.
"See a need? Fill a need!" 😍🥰
My energy supplier in North Carolina is Duke power and they've been adding lots and lots of photovoltaic power capacity, but they don't have _time of day pricing_ for their residential customers!
How are we supposed to _make hay when the sun shines_ if they won't give us time of use pricing, or the PV equivalent of the "fan club" in Kraken/Octopus? And we SHOULD be adding lots and lots of wind power because we have tremendously good winds along the North Carolina coast. That's why the Wright Brothers did their testing there. But no, we don't have that either.
BOTH problems are INFURIATING!
The trouble is, you need a strong politician (Preferably several) telling them they WILL provide the pricing model "For the good of the population".
The 4 year Election Cycle and the "lobby" system makes that "less likely"
@@rogerstarkey5390...and people's propensity to vote for the worst candidate available 😢
My understanding of the system in operation in the UK is that it is designed to ensure that despatchable power is maintained until the renewable grid has been stabilised. When this gets removed there needs to penalties for not supplying sufficient electricity.
Dude is a Genius! 👑✨👍
Genius salesman
We really NEED this guy, an innovator who actually tries to support customers rather than just maximising profit! Scotland could benefit hugely from his ideas … growth growth growth! … Nudge NUDGE Starmer/Reeves!!
Just like all tech companies these have great products when they are building market share.
This is true of facebook, google, ebay, amazon etc.
Once they have the market share the next phase kicks in which is squeezing the customers for every single penny.
This is what private or even public (shares) ownership does.
The only solution is government ownership of a small part of the market to set the base price.
The regulator does that, it's not a free for all.
Then the government squeezes the taxpayer for every penny it can get
Fantastic video, seriously need a smart energy provider in Ireland which is shamefully at least a decade behind the Brits’. I see too many onshore wind turbines forced to stop because the grid management can’t handle a lions share of renewables. 46 cents per kWh while profits since 2021 are higher than ever before is unacceptable
Thank God we have such diverse individuals in the UK building innovative world changing technology. Diversity is our strength...
Fabulous interview with Greg Jackson .. I am an Octopus customer with PV panels and a battery. I now think Octopus Heat Pumps are my next step. I can't afford an EV even if I thought that was also the way to go but I drive old cars!👍
same here but I have a Tesla and a home charger and the integration between Octopus and Teslas is brilliant
Listening to Greg's description of what Kraken can do and the data it holds on every energy consumer gives me the chills. No f*cking thank you. So glad I've refused to have a smart meter installed.
Get off TH-cam then!
@@nicennice😂
That's a small issue. The big issue is that "Kraken" won't build a nuclear power station or install your heat pump. So if we're mandating net zero, ie shutting down the power system that works, Kraken can't build the replacement and we're screwed.
Hi Dave, big fan of the channel. It has surprised me though that you have not done a segment on bike and e-bike mobility. Massive gains are possible if citizens whose lifestyles permit, transition from cars to bikes for daily transport. If this concept interests you, our team of experts and advocates would be happy to advise!
Thank you for all of the amazing content!
120 years ago, in the city of Seattle, the sewer system was built below the level of high tide. As a result, toilets would not work well at high tide, but at low tide they worked well.
Parents taught their children to relieve themselves based on the phase of the moon to make everything work better. Eventually, the sewer system and downtown was redesigned so that the sewer would work any time of day, and people could use the toilet whenever they liked. Their is a lesson in there somewhere for what this guy is trying to do.
Nice story! I thought it was going to end with "...and to this day, people in Seattle still relieve themselves based on the phase of the moon".
@@miguel5785 Yeah, both are full of shite.
So.... In Seattle, "A rising tide lifts all SHITS"?
(Sorry)
Great ad for Kraken and Octopus. I hope you get paid well. As any retailer that hasn't been sucked into the SAP black hole will tell you, it doesn't do anything that a myriad of other utility systems don't do. Jackson just happens to be a better sales man than most and more importantly knows the right people.
He needs to get that Dale Vince bloke on. A top bloke and richly deserves his hundred million, earned off our power bills and state subsidies. I reckon he's good for at least 50K. JHAT is worth every penny!
Octopus is also in Italy!!!! I am with them and it's great!
But are expensive as hell, at least if compared with “tutele graduali”. For a 3500 kWh/years the tutele is 600€/year and octopus is over 800
We’re with Octopus energy. Interesting video though - I didn’t know most of this
Don't simply retire from something; have something to retire to. Start saving, keep saving, and stick to investment.
It’s really heartbreaking to see how inflation and recession impact low-income families. The cost of living keeps rising, and many struggle just to meet basic needs, let alone save or invest. It’s a reminder of the importance of finding ways to create financial opportunities. You've helped me a lot sir Brian! Imagine i invested $50,000 and received $190,500 after 14 days
Absolutely! Profits are possible, especially now, but complex transactions should be handled by experienced market professionals.
Some persons think inves'tin is all about buying stocks; I think going into the stock market without a good experience is a big risk, that's why I'm lucky to have seen someone like mr Brian C Nelson.
I'm surprised that you just mentioned and recommend Mr Brian Nelson. I met him at a conference in 2018 and we have been working together ever since.
Yes! I'm celebrating £32K stock portfolio today... Started this journey with £3K.... I've invested no time and also with the right terms, now I have time for my family and life ahead of me.
I am getting my home energy from Octopus Energy in GERMANY, too!