Strait of Hormuz Chaos? This Aussie Pays Just $25 a Month for Power—EV Charging Included
Houston, TX – April 17, 2025 – While global energy markets convulse over the Strait of Hormuz blockade, one Australian homeowner is bucking the trend by paying a mere A$25 (US$16 / £13) for her entire monthly electricity bill—including charging her electric car and running an air conditioner.
Alice Klein, a resident of Adelaide, has achieved near-zero energy costs through a combination of rooftop solar, battery storage, and smart home management. Her bill has stayed flat even as wholesale electricity prices have doubled in some regions due to the geopolitical crisis.
“I’m essentially immune to the price spikes that are hitting everyone else,” Klein told reporters. “My system generates most of my power during the day, and the battery covers the evening peak when rates are highest.”
Energy analyst Dr. Mark Chen of the Australian National University called Klein’s setup “a blueprint for energy resilience.” He added, “With the Strait of Hormuz closure driving up fossil fuel costs, households that invest in solar-plus-storage can lock in cheap power for years.”
Background
The Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most important oil chokepoint, has been effectively closed since mid-March after a series of naval incidents involving Iran and Saudi Arabia. Around 20% of global oil supply passes through the narrow waterway.

The blockade has sent crude prices above US$120 per barrel and caused natural gas prices in Asia to triple. Electricity grids in Australia, heavily reliant on gas-fired generation, have passed the costs directly to consumers.
Alice Klein’s modest home in suburban Adelaide is equipped with a 6.6 kilowatt rooftop solar array and a 10 kilowatt-hour Tesla Powerwall battery. The system cost A$15,000 after government incentives, which she says she recouped in under four years.

What This Means
Klein’s experience shows that solar-plus-storage can provide near-total energy independence even in a grid connected to volatile fossil fuel markets. Her monthly bill covers only the fixed supply charge and occasional purchases when solar generation is low (e.g., during cloudy spells).
For the wider market, experts say mass adoption of household energy systems could insulate millions from future geopolitical shocks. However, upfront costs remain a barrier for many, and grid operators will need to manage variable renewable output as more homes go “off-grid-ish.”
Looking ahead, Klein is considering adding a second battery to eliminate her bill entirely. “The next step is to stop paying anything,” she said. “Given the way global events are heading, that feels like the smartest insurance I could buy.”
Meanwhile, the International Energy Agency has urged governments to accelerate rooftop solar procurement as detailed above as a hedge against energy security risks. The Strait of Hormuz closure is expected to last at least several more weeks, with no diplomatic resolution in sight.
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