Saving Green By Going Green

The cost of electricity is high here on Maui because the fuel to run the power plant has to be shipped in from at least 2300 miles away. Last I checked, we were paying something like 41 cents per kilowatt hour. That translated into monthly electric bills that typical ran between $240 and $260 a month … a heavy hit, especially since we have neither heat not air conditioning in our house.

Ah, but six months ago, we put in a photovoltaic system … thirteen panels up on the roof, facing south and not visible from the front of the house. (The two large solar panels in the photo are for heating our water.) On sunny days, it provides power for the house. When it provides more than we need, it sends electricity back into the grid and, when that happens, our electric meter literally spins backwards.

The cloudy, rainy weather is behind us now, and our new system is really starting to pay off. My most recent electric bill was for $27 – almost one tenth of what it used to be – and with lots more sunny days between now and December, the solar guys say there should be three or four months when it’ll net out at zero.

Based on recent bills and an educated guess, the system should pay for itself in seven years. So we’re saving money and doing our bit to help Maui Electric cut down on the fuel they need to generate electricity. It’s a very modest effort, but it feels good.