Monday, November 27, 2006

Solar Energy: Good Feel, Bad Deal


This week the Curmudgeon will focus on energy issues.


First off: solar power and why, for most homeowners at least, it is not going to be an economical way to reduce reliance on fossil fuels.


First, the good news: the Curmudgeon has gone solar! As we type this, the sunlight filtering through a thin layer of high clouds is powering our laptop and running the lights in our home office, among other things. Accordingly, this is now a green blog--no carbon was emitted (other than our breathing) in producing it.


Last week, just before the Thanksgiving break, we finished installation of 14 rooftop photovoltaic cells, which are now busily producing electricity in the waning sunlight of the coming winter.


Here's the details: each cell is rated at 190 watts, meaning that at peak efficiency (direct sunlight) it could produce 190 watts of electricity--basically enough to power three 60 watt lightbulbs. Since we have 14 cells, our system is rated at 2660 watts, or 2.660 kilowatts.


Sounds like a lot, but it really isn't. And the economics of the system aren't pretty!


Our system was installed by Don Sandros and his crew from Sand Energy (http://www.sandenergy.net/ ) out in Leesburg, Virginia, one of the few local companies specializing in alternative energy systems. Don's a good fellow--he's not overhyping solar. Indeed, he'd be the first to tell you that a residential solar electric system in the D.C. metropolitan area is not likely to pay off for a long time.


The first problem is that the cost of solar photovoltaic cells has remained stubbornly high due to increased demand, especially from Germany and Japan, which have highly subsidized programs to promote solar energy in homes and businesses. In the U.S., demand is also high in California, which has an agressive 10-year program to install solar power on a million homes. And China is starting to enter the market as well.


While supply is expanding, especially with new manufacturing plants in China, it can barely keep pace with demand, so prices are not falling. The solar panels installed on the Curmudgeon's roof are manufactured in the U.S. by a company called Evergreen, and they ain't cheap: they sell for roughly $1000 apiece. That means you're looking at something on the order of $5.25 per watt of installed power just to get started.


The total cost of our system, including the cells, mounting hardware, an inverter (needed to hook into the local power grid) and labor was approximately $24,000. (If you don't hook into the local grid, you'll need a battery system to store energy from sunny days for use on cloudy ones--the batteries cost more than an inverter. Most homeowners in urban areas opt for the simple approach of hooking into the local grid.)


Our net cost will be about $22,000 after we claim the $2000 federal tax credit for solar energy. Unfortunately, the federal credit maxes out at $2000 whether you intall a few hundred watts, or several thousand watts. And, if you live in Virginia, you don't get squat from the state. If you're lucky, you'll get a local property tax exemption on the new installation, but that's it. (It's pretty much the same in Maryland.)


Yes, you say, but what about those fantastic savings on electricity? Well, we certainly feel good about doing our part to reduce carbon emissions and eliminate a few barrels of imported oil from politically unstable regions of the world. But, truth be told, it's going to take a long time to pay off these solar panels.


The Curmudgeon's household uses approximately 16,000 kilowatt hours of electricity each year (which is not bad, considering our friend from Scarsdale, New York, who uses 35,000 kilowatts for her expansive home). (Tomorrow, we'll talk about what we're doing to conserve and decrease our overall consumption.)


Our new solar array will offset about 2700 of those kilowatt hours, meaning a 17% reduction. We get our electricity from Dominion Power, which is really quite cheap compared to what folks pay in other parts of the country. Our electric bill over the past year was about $1800, meaning we'll save about $300 a year IF prices for electricity stay the same.


Of course, electricity prices are likely to increase--indeed, Dominion is due for a big rate increase next year. Still, even if electric rates TRIPLED it would take more than 20 years for us to pay off our investment.


You can see from all this that while it feels good to install solar power in one's home, it's no economic bargain, certainly not in Virginia. Even if the price of installing solar comes down by half and the price of electricity doubles, the payoff to an average homeowner is still going to be well over a decade absent a significant government subsidy.
One way to make it more economic, however, would be to credit homeowners with solar arrays at a price that is closer to the utility's cost of producing peak power, especially in the summer when peak solar output corresponds to peak demand (due to air conditioning). While more complicated, such a system of credits is feasible and should be required as it more closely approximates the savings to the utility and other customers of not having to build more peak generating capacity.
With a Republican controlled state legislature in Virginia, however, we won't be holding our breath for such progressive legislation anytime soon.


Tomorrow, we'll talk about an easy way you can reduce your electricity consumption by almost as much as our solar system for only a few hundred dollars, resulting in immediate savings that will offset the cost in just a year.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

X - i enjoyed reading your post regarding the solar installation. I work as Alternative Energy Analyst for a hedge fund and i am always searhing for real life examples. One point I have to comment is on is your thoughts on subsidies for solar. While tax credits and subsidies make sense to "jumpstart" an industry the bottom line is that they only work on a small scale. If significant economies of scale do not drive much lower prices it becomes a larger and growing tax.

The big issue for the solar industy and wind is that with growing demand, cost are soaring. Instead of economies of scale, cost are rising creating the need for larger subsidies.

Additionally, as the industy matures the incredibly polluting industrial process to produce PV cells will become more prevalent. From the production of the polysilicon to the final modules, solar is a very dirty business. In my opinion much of this industrial production will moved offshore, like oil and gas drilling, so that everyone can at least feel good about their green efforts.

X Curmudgeon said...

John makes some excellent points, which can be boiled down to this: there's no free lunch when it comes to energy. Even the greenest technologies consume energy in the making and cause pollution and other side effects.

There is also a limit to subsidies--for example, the large subsidies in Japan and Germany are artificially keeping the price of solar panels high.

We would point out that in the U.S. the ethanol and biodiesel producers are getting huge subsidies--$.51/gallon for ethanol--which are causing some market distortions and promoting those fuels over certain alternatives that might be better for all of us in the long run.

Ian Gregory said...

Great to see someone writing about our solar panels! Sobering of course to hear the about the economic realities of solar power.

Got some interesting stuff on our products that you might like to know about if you're interested in chatting.

Got any photos of the solar system on your roof?

Ian Gregory
Director of Product Marketing
Evergreen Solar Inc

Anonymous said...

limit to subsidies--for example, the large subsidies in Japan and Germany are artificially keeping the price of solar panels high.
make home made solar panels

Anonymous said...

The big issue for the solar industy and wind is that with growing demand, cost are soaring. Instead of economies of scale, cost are rising creating the need for larger subsidies.sexy costumes

pulmonary disease said...

In my opinion much of this industrial production will moved offshore, like oil and gas drilling,

Edward Robins said...

Well planned energy use, therefore, balances human comfort with reasonable energy consumption levels by developing and implementing effective ways to create and utilise energy.

Solar energy

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Leo Shawn said...

All over Virginia, House holders are attempting to safeguard the state's normal magnificence by changing to solar power assets. Nu Solar power is the one and only best company in USA which provides Virginia solar program to the people of Virginia, So they live happy green life.