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Apple Creates Energy Company, Looks To Sell Excess Power Into The Grid (9to5mac.com) 107

An anonymous reader quotes a report from 9to5Mac: Apple has quietly created an energy subsidiary, 'Apple Energy' LLC, registered in Delaware but run from its Cupertino headquarters. The company has seemingly formed to allow it to sell excess electricity generated by its solar farms in Cupertino and Nevada, with plans to sell electricity across the whole of the U.S. But a set of Federal Energy Regulatory Commission filings suggests that Apple could have bigger ambitions in the power field. Currently, when private companies sell their excess power, they can only do so to energy companies -- and they often (varies by state) have to sell at wholesale rates. What Apple seemingly could to do, however, is sell directly to end-users at market rates. In other words, get paid retail prices for its excess power. Currently companies like Green Mountain Power can sell green renewable energy to homeowners all over the U.S. It wouldn't be a stretch to see Apple do this as a product in the future. Apple has told the FERC that it meets the legal criteria for selling electricity at market rates because it is not a major player in the energy business and thus has no power to influence electricity prices. It has requested permission begin within 60 days of its filing on 6th June.
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Apple Creates Energy Company, Looks To Sell Excess Power Into The Grid

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    This is a really interesting idea. Make everyone who is connected to the grid pay a fee for the infrastructure. Then let customers buy electricity from whomever they choose.

    • You should make a company that does that. You can call it "Enron".
  • by Anonymous Coward
    My wife makes our own renewable energy at home but I'm sure lazy people would prefer to buy it at the Apple store.
  • When I hear the word ENRON
  • by Bert Chadick ( 3657115 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @10:13PM (#52285891)
    Generating the power is one thing. Getting that power to the consumer is a different kettle of eels (electric of course). Those big asses power lines didn't put themselves up or maintain themselves. The grid's owners are going to want enough of a cut of the sales to probably make the project unprofitable, for the near future. I'm not telling Apple anything they don't already know but remember Enron. This was their business plan.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's even worse than that, the system can only store so much in its inherent latency. Peak production of renewables and peak use are never aligned.

      • Far from true, for both parent and grandparent posts. Buying/selling renewable energy is on a kWh basis and just offsets kWh that are generated by non-renewables at a system level. Time domain is only a factor in ensuring adequate transmission/distribution capacity.

        From a national grid and population perspective, the east coast could even handle the major problem point on the renewable-intensive load profile-- the time between sunset and 8 PM or so, with generation on the west coast. The normal load profi

    • by Holi ( 250190 )
      I pay separate line items on my bill for delivery and for consumption. Seems like the guys controlling the lines are getting paid no matter how little I use.
  • pivot (Score:5, Insightful)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @10:15PM (#52285897) Journal
    As time goes on, and "unibody aluminum" becomes commoditized, and eventually people are not interested in OSX or iPhones anymore; Apple, with plenty of cash reserves, starts investing more and more in power production, while over time, letting programmers go.

    A hundred years from now, everyone thinks of Apple as the power company, and if they know at all, they think it's quaint that Apple started as a computer company, much like we think of Nintendo starting as a trading card company, or Nokia as a wood-pulp mill.
    • by khallow ( 566160 )
      The obvious rebuttal is that power generation is a low margin business. Nintendo and Nokia both transitioned from low margin businesses to high margin businesses. That's why you remember them and their "quaint" origins.

      It would have to be integrated with a lot more than just electricity service in order to become a high margin business that Apple could transition to without becoming greatly diminished in the process.
      • Yeah I didn't want to do the research to find a company that matched exactly. Lazy me.
        • by khallow ( 566160 )

          Yeah I didn't want to do the research to find a company that matched exactly.

          We'd all forget it anyway.

      • With huge cash reserves, low margin can still be higher than the rate of return otherwise available.

        • by khallow ( 566160 )
          Where are those cash reserves going to come from, if you're in a low margin business? Even if Apple choose to keep its current, alleged cash reserves, inflation will evaporate most of that in a hundred years.
          • If you have an asset with a 30-year life paid for in today's dollars then inflation improves your margins. 2% Margin can quickly become a 30% margin at end of life. When you depreciate the full cost in the first 7 years, you get an even better picture.

            • by khallow ( 566160 )
              No, inflation doesn't work that way. Margin doesn't actually change since costs inflate like income. Depreciation has nothing to do with margin either.

              Finally, we're speaking of cash, not some durable asset, for which inflation shortens its effective lifespan. The more inflation, the lower the future value of the cash.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The days of making massive profits off energy might be drawing to a close. Not soon, but in 50 or 100 years time... When solar is so cheap every roof and suitable surface has it, which everyone has home batteries, when communities run their own wind farms. Energy production is being democratized, and while we will still need central generation for the foreseeable future I don't think it will be as hugely profitable as it is now. Subsidies will fall away, demand will drop.

    • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Friday June 10, 2016 @08:17AM (#52287457)

      A hundred years from now, everyone thinks of Apple as the power company, and if they know at all, they think it's quaint that Apple started as a computer company, much like we think of Nintendo starting as a trading card company, or Nokia as a wood-pulp mill.

      Apple isn't becoming a power company. They are selling excess generating capacity. That's it. Nothing to see here. They are making a little extra cash off of an underutilized asset. Building a solar farm generates capacity in a step function. You can't scale it exactly to your need so you have to buy a bit extra. You can then sell this extra capacity very cheaply because it costs very little to operate. The expensive bit was buying it in the first place. For solar there aren't even any input costs, just a bit of administration and maintenance. So they'll add a tiny bit to the bottom line and do it with clean energy. Nothing super exciting.

    • They're working on a car. Now they want to do solar energy. Next up: Apple Rockets and Apple iTubes (transportation).

      Innovation.

  • *Sticks copper and zinc electrodes into an apple*

  • for it to work, you got to hold your devices correctly

  • by ChunderDownunder ( 709234 ) on Thursday June 09, 2016 @11:16PM (#52286117)

    Apple's self-driving electric vehicle will need charging stations across the 50 states.

    Expect them to partner with a roadside diner chain. charge car battery, get a bite to eat while a Genius services your iPad...

    • Apple's self-driving electric vehicle will need charging stations across the 50 states.

      Expect them to partner with a roadside diner chain. charge car battery, get a bite to eat while a Genius services your iPad...

      My God... it'll be beautiful! [youtube.com]

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      That's the last thing we want, proprietary charging stations for every car manufacturer. Imagine how stupid it would be if Fords could only used Ford approved fuel. They would probably move to a printer ink model... uugh.

      It's worse than stupid for EVs, because chargers require connection to the grid. The next generation of chargers will offer up to 300kW, so you will need a very big grid connection to have lots of them. If companies start competing there will be problems with areas that only have enough sup

      • Knowing Apple it would probably be proprietary (or, an open standard not used by anyone else). But the idea of them creating power stations as outlets for their excess power does not *require* that. Arguably, they would in fact benefit by using whatever standard Tesla does. This idea makes a lot of sense -- and if they are allowed to sell electricity "at retail" then they can make money off of it. Here's hoping Apple doesn't do stupid.

  • Having a seperate energy company selling to end users can make sense.

    Imagine you have 2MW power generation capacity, and you need 2MW for your own (in this case datacenter) usage, and you have the brand to attract end customers.

    You could use your own power - but why, when instead you could sell 2MW "green" energy at the higher market rate to end users, and buy 2 MW "dirty power" at the lower wholesale rate, and keep the price difference.

  • This story is like this story [xkcd.com].

    Apple has generation capability. At times, they will have excess capacity. Selling that capacity back on the grid is a no-brainer. Setting up a specific legal entity for those purposes is also a no-brainer. And the analysis is self-contradicting; they say that Apple "could" seemingly seek to start selling power and get into the power utility business, "across the whole of the U.S." But their FERC filing has them taking the explicit...and non-trivial, by the way...stance th

  • I wonder what the proprietary Apple connector will look like...
  • So Apple produces a crap ton of devices that ... use electricity. And with the possible move to sell electric cars... Does this not represent a competing interest and possible conflict of interest? If you're buying your electricity from the person making the electric devices, do they still have the same incentive to make energy efficient devices?

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