Uncategorized

The Importance of “Switching Costs” to the US Residential Solar Industry

The DoE and numerous organizations and governments globally are focused on driving down the cost of solar convinced that lower costs will drive higher deployment. The cost of manufacturing modules and soft costs are in focus as is driving down LCOE.

Switching costs are more difficult to address, however, they are a crucial piece of the residential PV deployment puzzle.

The term “switching costs” refers to the effort or expense or inconvenience or all three required to switch from one product or service to another. The more expensive the cost of the switch in terms of money and inconvenience and the more habits and routines that must change to make the switch the higher the switching costs.

Read More
Uncategorized

Solar Interconnection Delays Cost California PV Owners $4.7 Million in Four Years

A new study by Complete Solar is shedding light on how much money California solar customers are losing to lengthy grid interconnection approval delays caused by utilities. According to the study, Permission to Operate (PTO) delays are costing the average residential solar customer in California $4.02 per day – adding up to a grand total in excess of $4.7 million over the last four years.

Data for the study was gathered from 1500 residential solar installations throughout the state and tracked from 2010 to 2015. The study ranks California utilities based on their average speed of interconnection approval. It found the Sacramento Municipal Utilities Department was the only utility with zero wait time, frequently issuing same-day interconnection approvals. Palo Alto Utility came in a close second, taking on average one day. Alameda Municipal Power, which ranked third in the study, averaged a total of 11 days.

Read More
NewsUncategorized

Solar Interconnection Delays Cost California PV Owners $4.7 Million in Four Years

A new study by Complete Solar is shedding light on how much money California solar customers are losing to lengthy grid interconnection approval delays caused by utilities. According to the study, Permission to Operate (PTO) delays are costing the average residential solar customer in California $4.02 per day – adding up to a grand total in excess of $4.7 million over the last four years.

Data for the study was gathered from 1500 residential solar installations throughout the state and tracked from 2010 to 2015. The study ranks California utilities based on their average speed of interconnection approval. It found the Sacramento Municipal Utilities Department was the only utility with zero wait time, frequently issuing same-day interconnection approvals. Palo Alto Utility came in a close second, taking on average one day. Alameda Municipal Power, which ranked third in the study, averaged a total of 11 days.

Read More
Uncategorized

Solar Interconnection Delays Cost California PV Owners $4.7 Million in Four Years

A new study by Complete Solar is shedding light on how much money California solar customers are losing to lengthy grid interconnection approval delays caused by utilities. According to the study, Permission to Operate (PTO) delays are costing the average residential solar customer in California $4.02 per day – adding up to a grand total in excess of $4.7 million over the last four years.

Data for the study was gathered from 1500 residential solar installations throughout the state and tracked from 2010 to 2015. The study ranks California utilities based on their average speed of interconnection approval. It found the Sacramento Municipal Utilities Department was the only utility with zero wait time, frequently issuing same-day interconnection approvals. Palo Alto Utility came in a close second, taking on average one day. Alameda Municipal Power, which ranked third in the study, averaged a total of 11 days.

Read More
Uncategorized

Israel’s 340-MW Solar Goal on Hold As Industry Waits for Government Policies

Israel set a goal in October of installing 340 megawatts of solar power. Developers are still waiting for the government to provide the details they need to move forward.

“Development has been a hard grind,” said Jon Cohen, chief executive officer of Arava Power Co. “Everything has gone slow and hard.”

Arava, based in Kibbutz Ketura, Israel, is developing 12 solar projects in the country with 200 megawatts of capacity, and can’t begin construction without more information from the government, Cohen said.

“We have been waiting since the beginning of 2013 for the regulations for the government’s current approved quotas.”

The regulations may be finalized this year, said Yuval Zohar, head of renewable energy at Israel’s Ministry of National Infrastructure, Energy and Water Resources.

“We’ve gone through public elections, a new minister came in and we assume that due to the importance and complexity of that issue, the regulation for these additional quotas will be finalized in the short run, hopefully within the framework of 2015,” he said. The government “is already in the process of preparation for” an energy auction for 30 megawatts of solar capacity.

Israel has set a target of getting 10 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2020. Last year it got about 2 percent.

Israel’s solar industry attracts $200 million to $300 million in annual investment, according to Eco Energy Financial & Strategic Consulting, a Herzliya Pituach, Israel-based energy research company. Most of that comes from local banks and domestic investment funds.

Cheap Gas

The slow progress on solar policies is due in part to large natural gas fields discovered offshore in recent years, that now account for about 60 percent of the country’s power, said Amit Mor, CEO of Eco Energy.

“This is the biggest challenge to the renewables sector,” Mor said in an interview. “Relatively cheap natural gas is an obstacle to the willingness of the government to further promote the penetration of solar energy and other renewables.”

The Tamar gas field was discovered offshore Israel in 2009 and the Leviathan field a year later. Combined they hold an estimated 29 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, more than the country could consume in decades.

Arava completed the 40-megawatt Ketura project last week, Israel’s largest grid-connected solar farm. The $79 million power plant is jointly owned with France’s EDF Energies Nouvelles SA.

“We are hoping for regulations by the end of 2015 and to be building additional solar fields by 2016,” said Cohen. “For Israel to meet its 2020 target, the industry needs to add an additional 500 megawatts to 700 megawatts of capacity.”

©2015 Bloomberg News

Lead image: Waiting. Credit: Shutterstock.

Read More
Uncategorized

Unlikely Allies in North Carolina Clean-Energy Fight

With North Carolina’s renewable energy mandate under assault from Republican legislators, green groups seeking to save it have found an unlikely ally: the state’s hog industry.

Smithfield Foods Inc. and other companies that raise and slaughter pigs have put aside decades of disagreements and united — for the moment — with environmentalists to defend the only state law in the nation that lists swine manure as a renewable resource.

Smithfield has been the target of lawsuits, petitions and political campaigns for stashing hog manure in football-field size lagoons or spraying it on farm fields. Now the company says it has found a way to green its process: capturing the biogas rising off the manure and using it to make electricity.

Unless, that is, a Republican-led drive succeeds to rescind tax incentives and requirements for utilities to use renewable energy.

Read More
Uncategorized

Israel’s 340-MW Solar Goal on Hold As Industry Waits for Government Policies

Israel set a goal in October of installing 340 megawatts of solar power. Developers are still waiting for the government to provide the details they need to move forward.

“Development has been a hard grind,” said Jon Cohen, chief executive officer of Arava Power Co. “Everything has gone slow and hard.”

Arava, based in Kibbutz Ketura, Israel, is developing 12 solar projects in the country with 200 megawatts of capacity, and can’t begin construction without more information from the government, Cohen said.

“We have been waiting since the beginning of 2013 for the regulations for the government’s current approved quotas.”

The regulations may be finalized this year, said Yuval Zohar, head of renewable energy at Israel’s Ministry of National Infrastructure, Energy and Water Resources.

“We’ve gone through public elections, a new minister came in and we assume that due to the importance and complexity of that issue, the regulation for these additional quotas will be finalized in the short run, hopefully within the framework of 2015,” he said. The government “is already in the process of preparation for” an energy auction for 30 megawatts of solar capacity.

Israel has set a target of getting 10 percent of its electricity from renewable sources by 2020. Last year it got about 2 percent.

Israel’s solar industry attracts $200 million to $300 million in annual investment, according to Eco Energy Financial & Strategic Consulting, a Herzliya Pituach, Israel-based energy research company. Most of that comes from local banks and domestic investment funds.

Cheap Gas

The slow progress on solar policies is due in part to large natural gas fields discovered offshore in recent years, that now account for about 60 percent of the country’s power, said Amit Mor, CEO of Eco Energy.

“This is the biggest challenge to the renewables sector,” Mor said in an interview. “Relatively cheap natural gas is an obstacle to the willingness of the government to further promote the penetration of solar energy and other renewables.”

The Tamar gas field was discovered offshore Israel in 2009 and the Leviathan field a year later. Combined they hold an estimated 29 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, more than the country could consume in decades.

Arava completed the 40-megawatt Ketura project last week, Israel’s largest grid-connected solar farm. The $79 million power plant is jointly owned with France’s EDF Energies Nouvelles SA.

“We are hoping for regulations by the end of 2015 and to be building additional solar fields by 2016,” said Cohen. “For Israel to meet its 2020 target, the industry needs to add an additional 500 megawatts to 700 megawatts of capacity.”

©2015 Bloomberg News

Lead image: Waiting. Credit: Shutterstock.

Read More
Uncategorized

Unlikely Allies in North Carolina Clean-Energy Fight

With North Carolina’s renewable energy mandate under assault from Republican legislators, green groups seeking to save it have found an unlikely ally: the state’s hog industry.

Smithfield Foods Inc. and other companies that raise and slaughter pigs have put aside decades of disagreements and united — for the moment — with environmentalists to defend the only state law in the nation that lists swine manure as a renewable resource.

Smithfield has been the target of lawsuits, petitions and political campaigns for stashing hog manure in football-field size lagoons or spraying it on farm fields. Now the company says it has found a way to green its process: capturing the biogas rising off the manure and using it to make electricity.

Unless, that is, a Republican-led drive succeeds to rescind tax incentives and requirements for utilities to use renewable energy.

Read More