4/7/2026 at 2:54:29 PM
This energy scam has been going on for more than 30 years in Europe and the UK.The former Economic minister and professor Yanis Varoufakis explains [1].
My Fiberhood cooperative has a solution: the Enernet smart grid where you pay $0.01 per kWh. We wire up one in three houses or more in a neighborhood with power routers. People buy and sell only solar electricity from panels in the neighborhood, from batteries and from every ev charging station on every parking spot in the neighborhood and from every parked ev. Each participating house saves $2000 to $5000 per year for 30 years or more[2]. You also get free 25 Gbps internet. You heat your house with a heatpump or cool the house with an ice storage ac powered only by solar. If the cooperative makes any money the share the profit with all the members or they vote to buy more solar panels and batteries. The cooperative gives loans to houses that can not afford their own panels.
[1] Best version with info graffics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3bo-s_OY4Q or
Longer version https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NicE0-N9ux0&list=TLPQMDcwNDI... or
short version https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaHepQyE37Q
[2] https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Merik-Voswinkel/publica...
by morphle
4/7/2026 at 3:14:01 PM
People seem to have trouble understanding how commodity markets naturally price their goods but the whole point of this website is to show that electricity prices are finally decoupling.edit: I didn’t watch the videos, I don’t have time first watch a video and then to dissect bullshit from truth.
by konschubert
4/7/2026 at 3:30:16 PM
But the solar electricity is still overpriced and taxed. People pay several times more for solar electricity from the grid than what they get if they sell to the grid.by fiberhood
4/7/2026 at 5:55:00 PM
It's not overpriced. If it was, the grid operator would be raking in massive profits because they're selling way above cost. In reality grid operators have small margins, this indicates there is no overpricing.Do you get paid less for power fed to the grid than power sold at retail? Yes. Because they're different things. You get say 5 cents for a kWh fed back to the grid, while you pay more like 25c. But guess what? Wholesalers also get 5 cents to sell to the grid. It's just that there's an additional 20 cents in grid operation and taxes for a retail price.
Taxes you can't avoid, it's not a 'scam'. It's money you pay that goes into public funds and returns to the public, and is spent by people you can vote to elect to represent you.
Grid costs also aren't a scam, they're just a cost of doing business. Again, profit margins are small, so they're pricing based on cost, not based on scam.
And it's all entirely optional. You can just install batteries yourself. You can do whatever you want. You don't have to use the grid. But surprise surprise, there's no reason to think that a small network is on average cheaper than a big network. The bigger the network the easier it is to share storage capacity and offload excesses from one place to another. It's the reason most states and countries try to build interconnectors to even build international grids, and why islands like Cyprus that don't interconnect and have small markets have the highest electricity prices. It's why anyone who builds a home and has the choice to connect to an available grid or not, does so. And why land and homes in locations without grid-access are valued less, because they're more expensive to set-up.
by NoLinkToMe
4/8/2026 at 12:07:11 AM
The cost of a nationwide grid is significant. Depending on the terrain and population density, it usually nets out at somewhere between 30%-50% the overall cost of electricity. Sure, if you run a microgrid among a few houses, you won't pay those costs, but someone has to pay the cost to maintain the km of lines to reach deep into the mountains of Bavaria.Microgrids also have some black swan events that can result in outage; if you are reliant on solar and storage but then experience a 7-day long period of stormy weather and no production. As you note, off-grid is always an option, and when you seriously look into it, you quickly find that costs to have that 24/7/365 service are many times more than just paying to connect to the grid.
by secabeen
4/8/2026 at 12:42:16 AM
At least in the us - the only way a utility can really make more money is by spending more money (as they get a return from the utility commission on a vested capital - massive oversimplification) but it means utilities are not incentivized to spend less rather than more…by balderdash
4/8/2026 at 3:12:05 AM
Same in Australia, after they were corporatised (turned into companies run for profit rather than run as a service by some level of government) it was recognised that as natural monopolies there would need to be some sort of regulation on how much money they could recover, it was decided a method based on their costs was best, so they spent bad money agter good im expanding the network hugely (based on crazy projections of growth in demand to nowhere) rather than building resilience into the network and lowering their costs.And that’s not even the cost of marketisation, that’s just the regulated network costs.
Series of awful blunders.
by Affric
4/8/2026 at 1:14:23 AM
The government employees who approve or deny the utility’s priced have an incentive to not approve higher prices. Their bosses are usually elected, and higher utility prices are very unpopular.by lotsofpulp
4/8/2026 at 1:26:11 AM
I was told by a former southern company exec that the McKinsey did a study for them and their largest competitive advantage was regulatory capture in the states in which they operate - unfortunately I think the politicians are more beholden to the utilities than their constituents..by balderdash
4/8/2026 at 2:39:32 AM
The price doubled in 6 years.by themafia
4/7/2026 at 3:36:28 PM
If you are selling to the grid, there is probably over-supply. Prices are driven by supply and demand. If you want to avoid selling at lower prices and buying at higher, try and get a battery. Check ecoflow to get an idea of the costs.by michael_j_x
4/7/2026 at 3:48:20 PM
Ecoflow is a good example of overpriced American tech. I payed $1500 for a 2 kWh battery. Our Fiberhood coop sells a 16kWh battery for $1800. Prices in China are lower still.by fiberhood
4/8/2026 at 12:20:31 AM
Prices have been dropping like crazy as the various battery manufacturers have been competing with each other. They are all pretty similarly priced at this point.A 2kwh ecoflow now costs $800. Still overpriced, but the gap is steadily narrowing.
Also, $1800 for 16kwh is a great price. That's $112/kWh. That's pretty close to raw cell costs.
Does the battery pack also come with charge circuitry, inverter, bms?
by cogman10
4/8/2026 at 2:12:10 AM
Ecoflow is actually a Chinese company.by pkaye
4/7/2026 at 10:44:19 PM
Ecoflow is overpriced crap for people who have no idea what ESS systems are like and so just buy a terrible product from a powerbank manufacturer.by antonkochubey
4/7/2026 at 4:38:34 PM
The price for grid power ought to be somewhat higher than the the grid operator(s) pay at the place where the power is delivered into the grid plus their own costs for running the actual grid. So what do you think is a fair price for building/maintaining/running the grid?The grid is a nationwide electrical circuit with requirements to connect to most buildings, and with demanding uptime and safety requirements. How much ought building and maintaining that to cost?
by Arnt
4/8/2026 at 12:47:27 AM
It’s really not - we built a rather large solar plant for one of our facilities offsetting like at most like 15% of demand, but because we were paying high utility rates it was a low double digit ROI project just on the spread between us it commercial rates and our cost of production (even higher when you added in the tax incentives) if you can build solar at utility scale costs and defray commercial or retail rates it’s a pretty good deal the problem is getting those utility scale cost structures when the projects are small…by balderdash
4/8/2026 at 2:10:50 AM
The value of electricity is extremely time dependent. You can easily overproduce solar power for your house during the day fairly cheaply. However batteries + gas generators for cloudy day quickly make the cost significantly higher.The grid gives you expensive guarantees about reliability. Just giving power does not do that.
by shadowpho
4/7/2026 at 3:36:49 PM
That’s because that’s how the grid is paid for.Maybe a max-capacity price would be better for household grid connections, but that doesn’t change the fact that the grid needs to be paid for.
by konschubert
4/7/2026 at 10:34:23 PM
We don't care. We want cheaper electric like other countries and want our politicians to make it happenBlah blah contracts blah markets blah always an excuse in the UK for why everything is more expensive than other countries
Is there a wall in the way? Tear it down. Make it happen
God we demand so little of our politicians in reality
by gib444
4/7/2026 at 3:10:24 PM
Is this a thing that people can actually sign up to, or is it vaporware? Varoufakis says a lot of things that aren't necessarily true.by pjc50
4/7/2026 at 3:28:36 PM
You can sign up by becoming a member of the Fiberhood cooperative for free. Send an email to Fiberhood at icloud dot com. We must have your address and map location link or Google map address code so we can draw maps and make a website for your neighborhood to sign up and form an Enernet.We will do a small survey and put up a detailed map of your neighborhood (like openstreetmap, see the slide in this talk [1]). We hand out door to door flyers and organise a weekend barbeque neighborhood party where everyone can come see how the cable between neighbours goes roof-to-roof, window-to-window or garden-to-garden between power routers. See our cost price bifacial solar panels and the large batteries.
We find that within a few weeks a few hundred people signed up for the cooperative and we start installing the first 10 houses. Most people invest in solar panels and batteries at wholesale prices installed by volunteers. Others get a loan to pay for this. You wind up getting payed for the panels you bought or paying around 1 dollar cent per kWh, saving a few thousand dollars per years for decades.
In the US the Rocky Mountain Institute and its founder Amory Lovins describes this as 'grid defection' and it happens on a large scale now.
Fiberhood has cooperatives forming all around the world, both rural and urban: Ukraine, Peru (near Iquitos by the Indian tribe on the Amazon River Bank, Southern Spain, Slovenia, Finland, The Netherlands, Australia.
by fiberhood
4/8/2026 at 1:50:13 PM
Hi, I tried to find more details of this initiative which sounds quite interesting (I'm living in Belgium) but it seems there is no website or summary info available - is the only way to learn more about the model a 4h lecture recording? Would you have any kind of package or info you can share on how this really works, wha the financing model is, etc?Thank you!
by goobatrooba
4/7/2026 at 4:13:02 PM
The Fiberhood planner maps are in the first slides in the first minute of the video. We used to have an interactive zooming map of Fiberhoods for every house in the Netherlands online but now we only have them available for Fiberhood members because of privacy rules. On the maps you can see where the batteries, solar panels and power routers are located in a Fiberhood version of Google Streetview.by morphle
4/7/2026 at 4:11:23 PM
Sounds like Fiberhood is adjacent to https://solarunitedneighbors.org/ ?by toomuchtodo
4/7/2026 at 5:23:03 PM
Yes and no, not really. There are many smart grids and more not-so smart grids around the world, but only a few are non-commercial or owned by the members.Fiberhood is unique in that we have our own Enernet power routers (a software controlled multi-port bidirectional AC-DC-DC inverter peer to peer network) that can share large amounts of DC current, has special power aggregation to enable megawatt EV chargers in every house, battery nano-inverters that make cheap batteries last up to 20000 charge/discharge cycles, integrate (free) discarded solar panels and has a range of software defined networking options including 4 x 25 Gbps internet ports per house. Most smart grids are just a different meter and payment scheme, not a radical rewiring of the entire electricity system in the neighborhood without a commercial company or government controlling what citizens pay. Other smart grids raise the cost of grid defection, Fiberhood tech makes it possible to have abundant redundant solar energy at its cost price $0.01 per kWh, many times cheaper than national AC grid pricing anywhere in the world. The tech was made to prevent making money on energy but incentivize solving the climate crises by making Solar by far the cheapest option. Stop almost all carbon and methane greenhouse gas emissions by going 100% solar.
by morphle
4/7/2026 at 3:32:10 PM
Please give some proof of Varoufakis lying. I always check what he claims in his books and talks and I never spotted a lie. I also check Saul Griffith and Amory Lovins talks, books and papers on factual errors and never spotten one in two decades.by morphle
4/8/2026 at 6:12:05 AM
Plus you become indépendant from toxic decisions taken by politicians.by zoobab
4/8/2026 at 8:56:58 AM
But it means you are simply exploiting the "normal" electricity grid this way by using it when your solar doesn't work and batteries run dry - that is, when the cost of elecitricty in a normal grid, with the high penetration of renewables, is highest. You do the normal capitalism thing: privatise the benefits, socialise the costs... And the higher proportion of renewables in the grid is the higher is your upside.If you want to completely stop using normal grid and rely on solar alone, you will need to overbuild your solar so massively, you won't be able to afford it (and will run out of land, too). Cost of electricity produced will be several euros per kwh, and a simple calculation shows just how massively unrealistic it is.
by anovikov
4/8/2026 at 1:34:01 AM
First I agree that the energy scam in the EU is a big one.> The former Economic minister and professor Yanis Varoufakis explains [1].
He doesn't "explain" anything. He proposes a model. He was minister of finance when Greece had to deal with the EU to negociate the terms of Greece's partial default on its public debt.
I don't think we should listen to what leftists who have been in charge of a country's public debt default as if it was the gospel when it comes to fixing an energy crisis.
Of course the model proposed by a leftist is a cooperative one. Resting on the shoulders of a lot of electronics and software built by capitalism.
I'm not saying it cannot work: I'm saying "your country freaking defaulted on its public debt, so I'm cautious with your genius ideas".
by TacticalCoder
4/8/2026 at 2:12:30 AM
This is an ad hominem argument but at the scale of a whole country.by sojournerc
4/8/2026 at 11:49:54 AM
It's a bit relevant to the conversation when the person making it has an incentive to deflect blame from their own corrupted country to evil EU.by izacus
4/8/2026 at 6:36:09 AM
Greece defaulted after the previous, right wing government falsified the country's accounting, but by all means, don't let reality get in the way of your ideology.by Balinares
4/8/2026 at 9:03:57 AM
We do not know if 'leftis' would have build all of it too. We only know that capitalism did.But we also know that capitalism is pushing our earth to a runnaway heat death for a lot of humans.
For a long time our planet and we have the capacity to rebuild our whole ecosystem on clean and cheap energy but we don't. Instead we still kill mmillions due to pollution and bring extential crisis to millions just because some lunatic behind the biggest military power on the planet decided to kill a whole civilization in one night.
by Glaklloo