Category Archives: Renewables and Energy

Thinking of getting leased solar? May want to read this article

Potential customers often ask what will happen when they try to sell their homes. The salespeople I spoke with said they allayed such concerns by saying solar adds value by lowering carrying costs. Jurich said the same thing during our interview. For TPO systems, however, there’s no data or reputable study to back that up. The Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, a publicly funded research organization in California, has found that an owned system is an asset. TPO systems weren’t shown to provide any net gain—they’re neither assets nor liabilities. (Although, tell that to Jug’s trust.)

Two days after walking through Jug’s ham shack, we made an offer. A week later, just before we entered escrow, we learned the solar array hadn’t belonged to Jug. It was, in the language of the industry, a third-party-owner, or TPO, system, belonging to Sunrun Inc., the largest provider of residential solar in the U.S. I started looking into the TPO model. It’s used less often than it once was, but it’s been important in making residential solar, once out of reach for most people, much more widespread. The reason is simple: Homeowners usually pay nothing upfront. A company like Sunrun puts solar panels on your roof, connects them to your home, and claims a tax benefit for owning the system. Going forward, you pay Sunrun to provide the bulk of your electricity needs instead of your utility.

I’d soon learn that the system was tied to the title of the house. It appeared that if we bought Jug’s place, we’d have to assume his lease arrangement with Sunrun. I wasn’t sure how I felt about this as a buyer, but it definitely piqued my curiosity as a journalist. I set out to examine the value proposition carefully.

read full article at: https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2019-sunrun-solar-panels/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

 

Solar tax credit falls after 2019

By 2022, the residential tax credit is scheduled to be eliminated altogether

Used as an incentive by the U.S. government to build out solar across the country, the ITC since 2006 has allowed commercial and residential customers to deduct 30 percent of the cost of installing a solar energy system from their federal taxes. Since a rooftop system can frequently cost $20,000, a 30 percent credit can amount to $6,000 in tax savings.

But 2019 is the final year the ITC remains at 30 percent. Starting in 2020, the tax credit steps down to 26 percent and in 2021 it drops to 22 percent. And in 2022, it is scheduled to go away completely for residential customers. For commercial solar installations, the ITC will drop to 10 percent in 2022, where it is scheduled to remain.

read more at: https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/energy-green/story/2019-04-27/solars-30-tax-credit-for-installations-starts-to-fall-after-this-year

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New SDG&E rates ‘time of use’ may vary for rooftop solar

sdge

San Diego Gas & Electric is rolling out “time of use” rates that will eventually affect the monthly bills for about 750,000 of the utility’s residential customers.

But will the switch affect the nearly 155,000 residential customers who have rooftop solar systems on their homes?

Yes, but the full answer is complicated.

The vast majority of solar customers will eventually move to time of use rates but some have the option to stay on a more traditional tiered-rate structure that is considered more financially attractive than time of use — it all depends on how long ago they activated their rooftop solar systems.

“It really varies on the residential side,” said Edward Randolph, the Energy Division Deputy Director for the California Public Utilities Commission, which has directed the state’s investor-owned utilities to adopt time of use rates, also known as TOU. “That’s why (solar customers) need to contact their utility to find out their exact circumstance.”

And circumstances have been changing quickly, in California’s energy landscape.

Many customers — those with solar installations as well as those without — had just gotten used to the latest iteration of tiered rates and adopting TOU means a transition to a different pricing plan.

For solar customers in the SDG&E service territory, the 20-year rule applies to those who activated their systems before June 29, 2016.

Randolph said the commission instituted the 20-year rule as an issue of fairness to solar customers who invested in a solar installation on their homes — a purchase that can frequently run to $20,000 or more, depending on the size of the house.

“When they installed the panels, they were looking at the financing and the payback of those panels based on the rate structure at the time,” Randolph said. “Ultimately, the commission made the policy determination that the most equitable way to treat those customers was to give them the option of staying on the old rate structure.”

After the 20 years are up, customers must move to time of use rates.

“If you’re a customer who installed solar a few years ago, you’re probably going to want to stay on those tiered rates and not get shifted over to TOU,” Heavner said.

But what if you installed solar on your home after June 29, 2016?

Here’s another part of the story that’s complicated.

Customers who activated their rooftop solar systems between June 29, 2016 and March 30, 2018 were defaulted to standard, tiered rates rather than TOU.

They can stay on tiered rates for now but eventually, they will migrate to time of use — either five years from the date their system activated or June 2021, whichever comes first.

read more at: https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/business/energy-green/sd-fi-timeofuse-rates-solar-20190322-story.html

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only