April 21, 2026Balcony Solar in Canada VS Germany: Is It Legal in 2026? (Rules, Cost, Alternatives)Balcony solar is legal in Germany but blocked in Canada in 2026. Here's the code gap, the safety data, and what renters can actually do right now.
April 21, 2026Selling a Solar Home in Canada in 2026: The Hidden Trap That Can Erase $20,000 at ClosingSelling a solar home in Canada in 2026? Your utility rate may not transfer automatically. Avoid a $20K equity loss with this province-by-province guide.
April 20, 2026BC Hydro Net Billing: Should You Pay Back Your $5,000 Solar Rebate?BC Hydro net billing vs rebate repayment explained with real math. See whether paying back the $5,000 solar rebate actually makes sense.
April 20, 2026Net Metering Is Your Free Battery in BC: Should You Skip a Powerwall in 2026?BC net metering can act like a free battery for bill savings. See when a Powerwall still makes sense in BC after the 2026 rule change.
April 20, 2026How to Spot a “Fuck-Off” Solar Quote in Canada Before You Sign AnythingA few years ago, I got a home-improvement quote so inflated I checked it twice to see whether it included the neighbour’s garage. Same job. Same […]
April 14, 2026Vertical Solar Panels in BC: What Science World’s New Array Means for Homeowners and Commercial BuildingsScience World’s new vertical solar array shows what’s possible in BC. Here’s what homeowners and businesses should know before buying solar.
April 12, 202613,000 Nova Scotia Solar Customers Can’t All Be Wrong: Why Rooftop Solar Keeps Growing in Atlantic CanadaNova Scotia now has 13,000 solar customers. Here’s what that means for homeowners, solar costs, weather myths, and buying decisions in 2026.
April 11, 2026Ontario Solar Boom: Will Your Next Hydro Bill Actually Be Cheaper?Ontario’s 14 new solar and wind projects add 1,315 MW. Learn what that means for hydro bills, net metering, 2026 rebates, and home solar.
April 10, 2026Quebec Solar Subsidy: How Hydro-Québec’s New Grant Cuts Installation Costs by Up to 40%Hydro-Québec’s LogisVert solar grant pays $1,000 per kW, capped at 40% of eligible costs, and makes solar in Quebec far more realistic for homeowners.