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Executive Summary
Developing clean, abundant
solar power resources in California can benefit all those who live and work
in the state – reducing air pollution, protecting consumers from volatile electricity
prices, and reducing the need for expensive upgrades to electric transmission
and distribution systems. By providing incentives in the near term for installing
solar photovoltaic systems on residences, the state can reap these public benefits
while helping the bottom line of solar homeowners.
Including solar photovoltaic (PV) systems in new housing in California can result
in significant public benefits.
Societal benefits of solar power development – in the form of reduced electric
system costs, mitigation against price volatility, environmental benefits and
encouragement of new business opportunities – rarely are assigned an economic
value. Nevertheless, studies suggest that the value of this power to Californians
is significant:
• Reduced electric system costs: To meet rising demand for electricity in California,
utilities (and in turn, ratepayers) will either need to invest in expensive
transmission upgrades, improve energy efficiency, or develop local resources.
Solar PV delivers power during peak demand times when it is most needed. Studies
have shown that it is cost effective for utilities to invest as much as $2,200
to $4,500 for every kilowatt of solar power developed in lieu of other capital
investments.
• Mitigation against price volatility: California now depends on natural gas
to supply nearly half of the state’s electricity needs. This dependence on natural
gas leaves Californians vulnerable to volatile prices and steadily increasing
fuel costs – natural gas prices have doubled between 1995 and the present. Increased
use of solar PV can reduce future demand for natural gas and provide a hedge
against future price fluctuations.
• Environmental benefits: PV systems reduce air pollution emissions that result
from fossil fuel power generation – particularly global warming gases (carbon
dioxide) and smog-forming emissions (nitrogen oxides). A study conducted for
the Sacramento Municipal Utility District found the benefits of averting these
emissions could range from $38 to $1,048 per kilowatt of capacity.
Installing solar PV systems on new housing has the potential to maximize these
benefits by reducing the costs of solar PV installations. Builders of new homes
are often able to achieve bulk discounts for PV module purchases while saving
on installation costs.
A buy-down grant of $2,800 per kilowatt of installed solar capacity in 2006
would enable solar PV to generate economic benefits for many buyers of new homes
in California while compensating homebuyers for the societal benefits resulting
from their decision.
Based on outputs from an economic model developed for the National Renewable
Energy Laboratory, the installation of a 2.5 kW DC (2.14 kW AC) solar PV system
priced at $6.00 per Watt can be expected to generate net economic benefits for
new homebuyers in nine of California’s fastest-growing municipalities with a
buydown grant of $2,800 per kW. (See Table ES-1.)
Table ES-1. Economic Benefits of 2.5 kW DC Solar PV System on a New Home
With $2,800/kW Buydown Grant
|
Montly Electric Bill Savings (year
1)
|
Net Monthly Loan Payment (after
tax)
|
Year 1 Savings
|
Cumulative Cash Flow (30 yrs.)
|
Net Present Value
|
| San Jose |
$57
|
$44
|
$152
|
$7,662
|
$2,722
|
| Bakersfield |
$53
|
$44
|
$100
|
$5,718
|
$1,989
|
| San Diego |
$54
|
$44
|
$122
|
$6,534
|
$2,296
|
| Murrieta |
$47
|
$44
|
$32
|
$3,144
|
$1,018
|
| Fontana |
$46
|
$44
|
$20
|
$2,702
|
$851
|
| Rancho Cucamonga |
$46
|
$44
|
$20
|
$2,702
|
$851
|
| Irvine |
$49
|
$44
|
$58
|
$4,116
|
$1,384
|
| Long Beach |
$49
|
$44
|
$58
|
$4,116
|
$1,384
|
| Chula Vista |
$49
|
$44
|
$52
|
$3,910
|
$1,307
|
• On average, residents
of one of the nine communities listed above could expect to save $4,500 over
the lifetime of their solar investment, with savings of $68 in the first year
(if the system is financed as part of a 30-year mortgage). The net present value
of that investment (which measures the benefits of the project versus the costs,
both discounted back to the present) would average approximately $1,500.
• The amount of benefits a homeowner can expect from solar PV varies from place
to place based on several factors – most importantly, the price of electricity.
In cities such as San Jose, where utility rate structures are favorable to PV,
solar PV could potentially be cost effective with incentives as low as $1,300
per kW, assuming savings from installing the systems during home construction.
These results – coupled
with published estimates of the societal benefits of solar power – suggest that
an aggressive state solar PV buydown program coupled with other incentives and
standards for the inclusion of solar power in new homes, could benefit residential
homebuyers, utility ratepayers and the state as a whole.
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