Cost of solar going down, industry says
Mar 22 - The Bakersfield Californian
David Stillwell is trying to wind down his monthly expenses so he'll
have fewer bills when he retires. Toward that end, last year he bought a
solar energy system for his Rosedale area home.
Since then, Stillwell's monthly electric bill has fallen from $450
during hot summer months to an average of about $12 a month.
"I'm tickled pea green," said Stillwell, a 49-year-old correctional
officer. "Now when I go out to the mailbox and grab the PG&E bill out of
there, I giggle. Before, I used to go weak at the knees."
There are a lot of reasons to consider solar if you've never thought
about it before, or previously dismissed it as too expensive.
"Prices definitely have come down," said Julie Blunden, vice
president of public policy for San Jose-based solar provider SunPower
Corp., which serves Bakersfield. "Innovation has made solar more
efficient and faster and easier to install. And if you can't afford a
big upfront payment, you can finance the purchase price or a lot of
companies will let you lease instead of buy."
A typical residential system that cost $8 to $9 a watt a year and a half
ago would cost about $5 to $6 a watt today, and that's before
incentives, said Ron Kenedi, vice president of Japanese company Sharp's
Solar Energy Solutions Group, which serves Bakersfield.
The clock is ticking
There is a limited amount of time to take advantage of a federal tax
credit and rebates from utility companies.
The federal tax credit for residential is 30 percent of a system's net
cost, but expires in six years.
The state's Go Solar California initiative, launched in 2007, included
two new incentive programs: The California Energy Commission's New Solar
Homes Partnership program for newly constructed homes, and the
California Public Utility Commission's California Solar Initiative for
retrofitting existing homes.
In the case of new construction, the rebate goes to the builder, who
gets $2.60 per watt if a solar array is offered as standard as opposed
to an upgrade, said Energy Commission spokeswoman Amy Morgan.
Rebates for retrofitting existing homes go to consumers. They're harder
to quantify because the amount of the incentive varies based on how much
energy the particular solar array will produce, the size of the home and
other factors, said Public Public Utilities Commission spokesman
Christopher Chow.
Homeowners who get systems under 50 kilowatts in capacity get a
one-time, upfront payment. Systems that generate more power than that
get a performance-based rebate paid out over five years.
Ten kilowatt hours are enough energy to run a 100-watt light bulb for
100 hours.
10 steps
The incentive program is being implemented in 10 phases, and the size of
the rebate homeowners can claim from their electricity provider
decreases as those phases progress. That's to encourage people to
install systems early. The sooner you do it, the bigger your rebate.
The next phase goes into effect in just a couple of months, according to
solar providers.
PG&E spokesman Denny Boyles couldn't immediately say exactly what day
the new rebate amount takes effect for his company's customers. The
person in charge of that program was unavailable, he said.
There are 461 commercial, residential and industrial solar systems in
PG&E's Kern County territory that have been eligible for a total of
$12.6 million in incentives, Boyles said.
Of those, 436 were residential, accounting for $4.1 million of the
incentives. All but 32 of the county's residential systems were in the
city of Bakersfield.
Bakersfield is an ideal place for solar because there is abundant
sunlight here for much of the year, said Jose Tengco, spokesman for Los
Gatos-based Akeena Solar, which serves Bakersfield.
But there are a lot of options available, so you'll need to research
manufacturers, installers and types of panels.
"The first thing you should do is understand what your goals are,"
Tengco said. "Do you want to get off the grid entirely, or just get out
of the top rate tiers?"
Energy prices are based on usage tiers. Customers who use the most power
during peak hours pay more than customers who conserve energy.
"The great thing about solar is it generates the most power when the sun
is brightest, which is exactly the most expensive time of day to use
electricity," Tengco said.
How much will you pay?
The cost of a system will vary based on how many panels you get, the
direction your house faces and whether the system is mounted on a roof
or erected on poles, among other factors.
The price is usually tied to how many watts of power the system will
generate. The more panels you get, the more watts the system can
produce.
Factoring in the incentives, a purchased system often pays for itself
within five to eight years.
Leasing a system generally costs 10 percent to 15 percent of the cost of
your power, said Lyndon Rive, chief executive of Foster City-based
SolarCity, which serves Bakersfield.
"When you lease, you see payback from day one," she said. "And when
you're leasing, you're not responsible for maintenance or repairs. if
anything goes wrong, we take care of it."
The lease is transferable to a new owner if you sell your home, and if
you decide you don't want solar anymore when the lease is up, most
providers will remove it at no cost to the homeowner.
Lease or buy?
School administrator Lloyd Fries, 54, decided to lease a solar array for
his northwest Bakersfield home to avoid having to come up with thousands
of dollars upfront.
Fries put $1,000 down for 36 rooftop panels. Even with a monthly lease
payment of $183 on top of his actual power bill, his total monthly
payment is averaging $250 a month, half as much as before.
"It hasn't even been a year yet and I've already got my down payment
back, easily," Fries said. "The only real negative was we had to wait
months to get it installed because of the backlog, but once they finally
got here, it only took a couple of days to put it in."
Warren Stan Moore, an 83-year-old semi-retired construction project
manager, said he paid just shy of $12,000 after incentives for the 26
panels he put on the roof of his southwest side home last year. It was a
good investment, he said. He figures he'll recoup the purchase price in
about five years because solar has cut his power bill by more than half
to about $72 a month.
"We aren't chiseling away on the power, either," Moore added. "We run
the air conditioning. I have power tools. My wife is always on the
computer."
Stillwell, the correctional officer, paid about $23,400 after incentives
for a 28-panel system.
If he'd invested the same money in the stock market, he said, he
wouldn't have had anywhere near the same profit in dividends as he'll be
making after his system's energy savings surpass the purchase price in
about seven years.
"I tried everything before. Cutting down on the AC, turning the lights
off, all of that, and my bill just kept going up and up and up," he
said. "I told all my neighbors, 'You'd better get on board with this,'
but they all said I was crazy.
"Who's crazy now?"
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