Just to correct a few points...We could profitably have a wind turbine. A 3.5KW plumbed into the mains would be about £25K installed. Excess production locally limits me to 3.5 down from 5 originally. Plus an annual service plus insurance with it being within quite a long way of a road/house for when the blades fly off.
The turbine itself only costs something like £5K, or did at the time.
Instead of FIT and grid connections I wonder if there is a future in each property having its own production and storage?
Any"renewable" grid connection requires a duplication in capacity for when the wind/sun is being cheeky because demand doesn't take that cheekyness into account.
As some on this thread have said, it is perfectly possible if you know it's going to be sunny you put the washing on, because you profit from your installation. Individual decision making is possible.
A lead acid battery bank in your shed (communal?) of a size to run a washing machine, charged from your own turbine and or solar panels could be a scalable kit installed by a nationwide govt sponsored contractor. You in control of your supply in a limited way, no profit directly just savings as life goes on ever more expensively. The house remaining on grid as now, just a mains battery sourced supply for whatever you plug into it.
Not lithium of course, limited lifespan and much more expensive in a use where paying more for the weight saving is irrelevant. Lead would require perhaps more maintenance but that could be interested competent householder or a visiting techy.
Using ones shiny Tesla as a battery bank is only sensible if your wallet is deep and you shut your eyes when you watch how fast it's emptying. Such a cars lithium battery at say £10K new lasts 1000 full charge cycles. Every time the leccy company borrow some of your stored capacity you may get paid a profit on the energy cost down the cable but does it cover battery degradation?
L/A is obsolete and despite it being 'apparently' cheaper, in terms of actual storage versus life expectancy, is the poorest choice by far....
Say you want a '200ah' capacity (which in a 12v bank would be 2.4kwh, in a 24v bank 4.8kwh)
With lead acids- you get 300-500 cycles if taken to 50% DOD (depth of discharge)- which means you actually need (sticking with 12v here) 400ahr of 'label' ahr...
if you want 1000-1200 cycles, you have to stay under 25%DOD- but that means you are now up to 800ah of label capacity
You 'might' get 3000 cycles if you keep your DOD under 10%- but that means to get that 200ah of actual capacity, you are up to 2000ah of actual batteries required!!!!
Li-ion (as used by Tesla and in your phone- depending on quality, they can get up to 1200-1500 cycles at 80% DOD with active BMS and cooling etc- without it, 300-500 cycles is more common- they have the advantage of a lot of storage in a very light package...
The outright winner in terms cycle life is the LiFePO4- which is what is found in most 'home batteries' (except Tesla Powerwalls which currently use Li-ion)they weigh about twice as much as Li-ion per kwh, but at 80% DOD last in excess of 5000 cycles, and at 70% DOD in excess of 7000 cycles- yet cost about 2-2.5 times the price of L/A...
In terms of equal storage capacity to lifespan- a 200ah 'actual capacity' bank means you will have to oversize your L/A bank by a factor of TEN, and even then, it will only last half as long as a LiFePO4 bank- meaning that you need to buy 20 times the 'ah label' of L/A to equal the same as a LiFePO4 battery- which costs only 2.5 times the price...
This is important to understand if you actually want to use the system in reality...
(I installed offgrid systems,boats and 4wd dual battery systems since the 80's and live offgrid myself electrically, due to the cost of getting 'the mains in'- my own system cost under $18k Au, where getting the powerline run in was $42k...)
To equal my approx 200kg of LiFePO4 cells (I got 20kwh of storage at 20 years with 70% DOD) with L/A- I would need to buy close to six TONNES of L/A batteries over twenty years...
:-O