I think at some point you have to ask your retailer for a cheque or bank deposit.
Richard
We used to get around $500 - 600 per quarter back from them and it was a lovely cheque in the mail.
They then changed to a direct debit system every quarter, but then they finally moved to a credit only system.
Since I had 2 x accounts with them, 1 for the solar and 1 for my use, I told them that I had changed my payment system to a 5c coin payment only with pick up only and my office was only open on Sundays between 3am and 4am. I then stopped paying the bills and received some nasty letters.
I forwarded the nasty letters with my credit invoice to my local MP and our ombudsman.
Oddly enough in a couple of weeks they had made arrangements to go back to paying me again!!!
They even credited the "overdue" fees on the condition I withdrew my invoice for accounts management after their error. Damn shame as I charge $77 per hour and had a truckload of time invested in it!!!
I'm not sure about other states but here in NSW the feed in Tariff on ALL systems ends at the end of the year.
While I'm sure some authorities will send a letter out, some won't and some customers will be left wondering???
I'm going to have a busy start to the year installing new meters for all those solar systems
Back to the original post and issue. If you run your pumps at night you do save a lot of money, but a lot of councils and neighbours have noise conditions and pool pumps don't meet them.
Its great if your neighbours don't mind, but some do.
Also smart meters are a very grey area.... check the fine print and do the maths. They can actually cost you a lot more if not used properly.
Also had a lot of talk lately about setting up hybrid systems and battery banks, but the price of the technology is a bit too high for the average user at the moment.
Give it a while and it will come down.
Currently I reckon one of the best options is to go for micro inverter systems which are pretty foolproof and a lot easy to manage, maintain and repair as the years go by.
A simple AC charger can then be added later for battery reserves during the night.
It's a very fast moving industry at the moment and it doesn't look like slowing down.