Why Solar Permitting Matters And What You Can Do To Help: A Discussion With SEIA’s Abigail Ross Hopper

permitting

By Frank Andorka, Senior Correspondent

At the beginning of June, the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) co-hosted a meeting in San Francisco, the purpose of which was to find ways to reduce extra costs associated with going solar. These costs, known as soft costs, include the cost of permitting, inspections, customer acquisition and other issues. SolarWakeup caught up with SEIA’s President and CEO Abigail Ross Hopper to discuss how the meeting went and what the next steps will be.

SolarWakeup: What was the purpose of this first meeting?

Abigail Ross Hopper (ARH): This was an introductory meeting, and as such, we think we did a nice job of laying the issues on the table. The next step broadly will be to identify concrete solutions, and determine specifically what it’s going to take to dramatically reduce soft costs. We see this as both a real and a critically important opportunity for the industry.

SWup: Why is the issue of permitting so important to the industry?

ARH: The process to design, permit, inspect and interconnect is much more burdensome in the United States than it is in other developed economies. Inconsistent interpretations of the rules (which can be national, regional, and local) from jurisdiction to jurisdiction makes the process inefficient and costly for both solar companies and permitting offices while also leading to customer frustration during a lengthy permitting process. That customer frustration can lead to contract cancelation, meaning all the time and money spent on such customers is lost and must be made up on systems that are completed. All in all, this contributes to a typical residential PV system in the U.S. costing about twice as much as a typical system in Australia. The current permitting and inspection process exists to ensure the safe installation of the system but there is a better, more effective way.

SWup: How can the industry participate?

ARH: Several organizations and companies, including Sunrun, Mosaic, SEIA and The Solar Foundation (TSF), are co-leading an effort, in collaboration with other companies and organizations, to develop a plan to thoughtfully streamline the process in the U.S. while maintaining high safety and quality of work standards. SEIA will build on the expertise and success of its Codes & Standards work and TSF will build off the work of its SolSmart program. Industry can participate and shape the campaign by joining SEIA and learning about and espousing to cities the successes of SolSmart.

SWup: What conclusions were reached at the meeting?

ARH: The participants are continuing discussions to develop and finalize an aggressive plan of action. Organizations and companies have seen a clear need to address this problem and have made commitments to work on this to reduce soft costs. More details to come soon.

SWup: What affect do you see these discussions having on the segment?

ARH: This is about making solar more affordable. More affordable means more accessible to more Americans and businesses. Cutting deadweight loss and unnecessary steps and costs benefit everyone.

SWup: What is the next step?

ARH: We’re continuing to build the coalition and assess what it is going to take to do this right. But real support in resources and funding from the industry will be crucial.

SWup: What policy prescriptions at the federal or state level can help move the needle on this?

ARH:
This issue does not fall neatly into federal or state policy lines but there are opportunities to engage at national, state and local levels. All will be necessary in the end.

For more background on the permitting initiative outlined by Abby, you can catch Yann’s interview with Andrew Birch

Making Electricity and Solar Usage Visible To The Naked Eye

Making Electricity and Solar Usage Visible To The Naked Eye

By Yann Brandt

Bidgely Whole House Usage Details - solarBidgely means Electricity in Hindi. And making your electricity usage at home understandable is the business of Bidgely, the company based in Sunnyvale, California. Electricity is this magical physics phenomenon that results in a bill at the end of the month, we use it almost every minute of the day but do we really know what is going on?

The goal is to disaggregate your energy usage, which Bidgely calls ‘energy disaggregation’ through its platform filled with intelligent algorithms. By seeing the energy usage through green button or utility dashboards, the homebeat platform can tell you (the homeowner) what appliance is using the electricity. By showing you the details, it allows the user(s) of the home, to review their usage with a day lag and change their habits. Bidgely allows homeowners to use their system for free and all sharing of data is purely opt-in. The company is working throughout the Country but in some areas you may be required to install a monitoring hardware kit though the goal is to be hardware-free.

It may be complicated to see how a energy disaggregation tool has any meaning for the solar industry at first glance. Information and data will drive new users to reduce energy usage. Homeowners will want to battle each other for energy efficiency pride and being close to net-zero. It can also be foreseen, that solar companies and home energy service providers would benefit to see how much energy a home is using and how the pattern of usage affects the value of solar.

We continue to see the trend of utilities, homeowners, home automation and solar come together as we wrote a few months back (Is Google About To Be Your Cleantech Utility). Bidgely animates the story for everyone with data and algorithms. With their summer freedom campaign, utilities can use the Bidgely service free of charge for the next 2 years, so expect to see your energy bill come together on drier load at a time!

Intersolar North America, 3 levels of solar trends

Intersolar North America, 3 levels of solar trends

By Yann Brandt

Wednesday, July 9In trying to find the market story, many of us travel to the trade shows. Last week was the time to attend Intersolar North America (ISNA) in San Francisco. A three level affair featuring the finest in solar gives a look into the window of solar as made up by each of us that attended. ISNA happens every July in the same place a few weeks after the largest solar show, Intersolar Europe in Munich. We had the opportunity to speak with Markus Elsässer, the Managing Director of Solar Promotion GMBH, who puts on the Intersolar show about the main trends of this year’s show. Trends that included energy storage, balance of systems and micro-grid solutions.

The trade shows peaked alongside the solar industry in 2011, where the most companies exhibited at the shows before consolidation took over. The trends of participants has also changed in the past few years. Themes have largely shifted from manufacturing and modules towards soft costs and balance of systems.

With the focus on BOS and soft costs, ISNA saw the rise of energy storage as well. Some 40 companies had energy storage in their booth this year, in addition to the almost full time conference stage educating visitors about the topic. “With US solar still showing high soft costs, some best practices from other parts of the world can be shared,” said Markus about how companies are collaborating, “The learning is in both directions, as Germany transitions to a post feed-in-tariff market, companies are looking toward finance innovation from the US to bring back to Europe.”

Energy storage was a big factor affecting floor discussions about microgrids. Spun out from the projects in Puerto Rico where solar farms had to include some storage, some financing groups have been getting comfortable with including broader technologies into solar investments. We expect this trend to continue as post-Sandy thoughts come into play or areas where energy is above $0.20/kWh and power quality is unreliable.

Intersolar North America is part of a global solar presence, with Intersolar South America happening later this year in Brazil. The global presence and trade shows creates an opportunity for international partnerships for companies looking to grow in new markets.

The conference programming grew in 2014 over past years through the partnership with ASES. This year, conference attendees had the addition of almost 40 programs to learn from through the conference collocation. The conference for Intersolar is put together by a committee of 35 members, partnerships with 10 State solar groups and an extensive contractor day put on by CalSEIA. For anyone that thinks Intersolar North America is too ‘German’, 2014 showed the learning that can be had by coming to the show. At the very least it represents the best in solar at the annual Solar Battle of the Bands!