Greenlogy is updating its solar energy policies to stop discarding portions of excess electricity generated by its customers. According to local media reports, the energy supplier is revising how it handles electricity surpluses, allowing prosumers to retain more of the energy they feed back into the grid.
How Greenlogy’s Surplus Policy is Changing
The company previously disregarded a portion of the electricity surpluses produced by solar installations. Under those previous terms, some of the energy fed into the grid by users was not credited or stored for future use. Greenlogy is now removing this restriction to ensure that these surpluses are no longer discarded.
Impact on Solar Energy Storage
For prosumers, the ability to account for every kilowatt-hour of surplus is essential for reducing energy costs during periods of low production, such as winter. When a supplier discards surplus energy, the user loses the economic value of the power their system generated. By ending the practice of discarding these surpluses, the company allows users to maximize the efficiency and financial return of their solar hardware.
Broader Trends in the Energy Market
This policy shift follows a pattern of changing regulations among energy providers. According to local media reports, Greenlogy is one of several suppliers currently altering the rules regarding how solar electricity is stored and credited. These changes reflect a wider market adjustment as the volume of decentralized energy production increases, forcing suppliers to update their technical and contractual frameworks for managing residential solar arrays.