For me it seems the point of going solar with a battery is to not have to buy electricity from the grid at all if possible.
It seems silly to generate electricity, sell it to the grid at a poor rate, only to have to buy it back again at a much higher rate.
The government's incentives for buy back rates have stopped now, my brother still gets a good rate as he signed up before it changed.
Of course in winter you will have to buy some with short days etc.
Ollie
Things must work differently there. They generally won't allow you to install and connect an array that's larger than your proven use here. Things may have changed due to EVs and maybe they allow an adjustment, but I'm not sure. Their objective is to make sure that you're not supplying power back to the grid as a generator.
So, what happens with the net metering is if you use a certain amount of Kwhr for a month, it doesn't matter when you use it. If you can do the whole thing perfectly, let's say, your bill is zero or maybe ever so slightly negative. If you're using 8kwhr for an oven and giant air conditioner, but it averages out to 2kwhr during the day and your panels generate the same amount, the meter just reports the net. So you're freeriding generated power off of the grid (the same as you would draw from a battery) when you need to and pushing power onto the grid when you don't need it.
You more or less get to use power like you have a battery but without the battery. The fractional generation reimbursement is, I suppose, to prevent someone from drastically changing consumption and getting paid the same as a preferable generator. As in, a gas generation station is someone you'd rather pay 7 cents an hour to vs. someone's rooftop, but the net metering rules cause the utility to pay the same for power from both, and even further than that, require the grid that has supplied some power and taken some from the panels to suddenly remove the grid charge, too.
That part doesn't make as much sense and it's changing (and should).
Before batteries, I remember standalone systems having coil shunts and such things. It'd be dandy if those shunts heated water and then heated a fluid mass somewhere for fall and winter heat, but I'm sure that's not a feasible thing.