The coming of solar grid parity offers an opportunity for millions of
Americans to go solar affordable. But it also means a potential
transformation, a democratization of an electricity system long
dominated by centrally-controlled utilities and centralized ownership
and production of electricity. When solar can undercut grid electricity
prices, it may also undercut this 20th century system of centralized
ownership, bringing economic sunshine and self-reliance to communities
along with solar electricity.
Millions of People, Thousand of Megawatts
When solar grid parity arrives, it won’t mean that everyone can go
solar. The most likely participants in the residential sector will be
folks who own their own home. Even then, there will be some homes whose
roof is unsuitable for solar power for one reason or another (e.g.
shading). The following analysis takes the year of solar grid parity for
the nation’s largest cities and translates it into megawatts of solar
power potential.
We used the following assumptions to calculate the residential solar rooftop potential for each metropolitan area:
- Only non-vacant, owner-occupied properties were considered.
Nationally, about two-thirds of homes are owner-occupied and not vacant,
with major metropolitan areas varying from 50 to 70 percent.
- We estimated approximately 1,000 square feet of total roof space per home.
- We assumed that only 27 percent of this space (in the aggregate)
would be suitable for solar, based on national studies of rooftop solar
potential.
- We assumed that 1 kW of solar could be installed for every 100 s.f. of suitable roof space.
With these assumptions, we can use our previous analysis of the year of
solar grid parity (based on the average residential retail electricity
rate) to estimate the potential capacity of solar power that could be
installed on home rooftops at grid-beating prices each year until 2027.
The above chart is quite conservative. For one, the data only reflect
the 50% of Americans that live in the largest 40 metropolitan areas.
Additionally, we used average grid prices and did not factor in
time-of-use pricing or “economic grid parity.” Finally, residential
solar is only a fraction of the total solar market. In California, the
largest U.S. solar market, residential solar represents approximately
30% of the installed capacity in the California Solar Initiative
program. Thus, the grid parity potential numbers above are a fraction of
the actual solar potential when considering commercial and public
sector property as well as communities smaller than the 40 largest
cities.
Additionally, rooftops aren’t the only place for solar, and the
availability of other locations could further expand the grid parity
opportunity, such as parking lots, near highways, underneath existing
transmission lines, and on the ground near existing buildings.
Jobs and Economic Development
Solar provides an unparalleled economic opportunity for local power
generation and local economic benefits. Each megawatt of solar power
generates as many as eight jobs and $240,000 in economic activity, and
most solar power projects can be built right next to or on top of the
building that will use the electricity.
Previous studies by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory indicate
that locally owned renewable energy projects multiply the job and
economic benefits of renewable energy projects.
With a potential for 30,000 megawatts of residential solar in the
next 6 years, communities across the country could gain over a quarter
million jobs and create over $18 billion in economic activity.
Value to the Electricity System
There’s also ample evidence that distributed solar power has much
greater value to the grid than simply electricity output. The delivery
of power during peak periods (covered by time-of-use pricing) is just
one element. The ability of solar to avoid transmission access charges,
supplant long-distance power sources, reduce stress on the distribution
system during peak power events and hedge against fossil fuel price
fluctuations can vary from $0.03 to $0.14 per kWh. Solar also
has environmental benefits (relative to existing power production) that
provide additional value.
for complete article please visit http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/blog/post/2013/12/the-solar-opportunity
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