Breaking Down The Top Data from GTM Solar Summit 2015

By Yann Brandt

solar ppa pricingGreentech Media’s Solar Summit 2015 (#GTMSS2015) brought together over 500 of solar’s brightest. The solar summit tends to be a bit different than many other conferences since the focus is on data and research, rather than products and services. The event kicked off with Shayle Kann of Greentech Media, who broke down the current state of the solar market and with some sharp analyses. For the full coverage on the presentation, see here.

  1. Utility Scale Solar Costs Decline and Offtakers Base Grows

Utility scale solar is now consistently below $70/MWh and is being installed around the world at rates that match this new price, which shows signs of exponential growth. Now, to create new markets, we need a stable offtake environment and the lowest prices possible. There is cost to risk, so a 30-year merchant solar plant would likely average rates higher than $70/MWh. On the other hand, there is value for a hedge, which solar energy provides to utilities.

How does this affect the solar market?

With these lowered prices plus community solar, virtual net-metering, and direct access to customers who want solar, solar developers can sell the energy directly to users. Just look at the 130MW project for Apple — all of that energy is purchased by Apple but produced by a single, massive solar farm.

  1.  Residential Solar Market Gets Saturated

While there are 113 million households in America, it seems only 9 million can actually receive solar cost effectively. First, you start by removing the homes that are rented. Then, you narrow to homes in states that support solar and homes with sunny enough roofs. After, you need people with the proper FICO score. The total number of viable homes goes down 90%, leaving just 9 million homes. One interesting reduction is the 38 million homes in solar friendly states to 29 million homes that have the right FICO score.

How does this relate to other solar markets?

Imagine doing the same analysis in commercial solar. Going from all commercial buildings to commercial buildings in solar friendly markets is an easy analysis and in some markets represents almost 50% of total energy usage. For hypothetical purposes, let’s assume that the same is true for commercial and 33% of buildings are in solar friendly states.

Looking at the prior cutoff, does the tenant own their building? Probably a lower number than the residential comparison, but looking at the next question of “how many tenants/building owners have a FICO of over 680?”

That is the question of the day in my mind. How do you index the commercial solar credit outside of publicly traded customers? Yes, you can look at three years of financial statements, but how can you do that quickly and cost effectively?

  1.     The bundles energy market is here, going to get bigger, and more utilities are getting involved

We have already seen utilities get into non-regulated solar development and owning solar assets in their portfolio. Innovation, on the regulated side of utility headquarters, is becoming more prevalent. Florida’s investor-owned utilities have brought this up to the tune of nearly 1GW, and other states have already seen their regulators make decisions on this new era of energy system. On the other hand, things are also getting smaller like partnerships with EV charging stations, demand response systems, or home automation.

Does solar really benefit from this?

More solar is always a good thing for the sector, it means more jobs, more manufacturing, and more competition that drives the cost of capital down. Equally important, we can put resources toward the customer experience when we know there are plenty.

In the past it was a challenge to bring the rooftop industry down to eye level by doing a monitoring setup or something similar. Today, the ability of a bundled package increases the touchpoint between solar generation and the customer, which will make many more users become solar evangelists.

Being at Greentech Media’s Solar Summit was another great learning experience. Speaking on the crowdsourcing panel, I was, as usual, surprised by the general consensus of the industry. So while it always seems like I am a contrarian, I saw it more like an opportunity to have my thoughts challenged. The next events for me are Intersolar, Solar Securitization, and REFF Wall Street. I look forward to meeting you there.

Originally Posted on Conergy.com

Top 10 most read solar articles by your peers this week!

These are the top 10 most read solar articles by your peers this week!

#1 Forbes: How Fast And How Deep Will Utilities Venture Into The Solar Energy Craze?

#2 ABC: New Concept in Solar Energy Poised to Catch on Across US

#3 Washington Post: Utilities wage campaign against rooftop solar

#4 Scientific American: Solar Power Faces Uncertain Future in the U.S.

#5 Grist: New York’s new solar plan sets a high bar

#6 RE World: Solar Industry Must Support ITC Extension or Face Potentially Dire Consequences

#7 Wall Street 24/7: Why First Solar and SunPower Had to Form 8point3

#8 Renew Economy: Developers to use storage to keep new housing estates off grid

#9 Greentech Media: A Comprehensive Guide to Rebates and Tax Credits Under the California Solar Initiative

#10 NPR: Tension From Utility Companies Casts A Shadow On Rooftop Solar Industry

For more insight on this week’s top news stories, subscribe to the email. The insight is reserved for email subscribers and is not posted on the web. The Top 10 is ranked by the number of SolarWakeup.com readers that clicked on the news article during the previous week.  

Have a great weekend!

Yann

Solar Asset Management: 4 Best Practices From The Experts

By Richard Matsui

mainpic-solarWith the notable exception of Intersolar North America, it’s surprisingly rare for a major solar conference to be held here in San Francisco. So when Solarplaza extended an invitation for us to speak at its 2nd annual Solar Asset Management conference here in the city, we leapt at the opportunity.

I joined fellow panelists Kent Williams (VP of Asset Management, Vivint Solar), Jimmy Bergeron (Director of O&M, SolarCity), and Matt Golden (Senior Consultant, IBTS) for a discussion entitled, “Challenges in effective management of small scale portfolios.”

4 Asset Management Best Practices From The Experts

Measure twice, cut once: With small scale portfolios, it is especially important to build systems right the first time. Why? The cost of a single truck roll to solve an O&M issue can wipe out years of electricity value that the system is generating. Therefore, the most cost-effective solution to O&M is to ensure that O&M is not needed in the first place, by ensuring your installers are building high-quality systems with high-quality equipment from the start.

You need to examine the tails: While our industry often describes portfolio performance in terms of its average (e.g. “my portfolio is at 103% of expectations), there is a wealth of insight hiding in the anomalies, the “tails”–especially when looking at portfolios that run into the hundreds or thousands of systems. Even with a “103%” portfolio, it’s your customers on the left tail of the portfolio distribution who are not giving you referrals and leaving you negative Yelp reviews.

Be disciplined with data collection: Jimmy Bergeron showed an impressive chart of 75+ O&M issues that SolarCity deals with, in order of frequency. Generating this chart requires that SolarCity classify every single O&M case it has ever handled–that is a painstaking investment for any developer. But it pays off richly: SolarCity has tremendous insight into what factors cause O&M problems. That insight is fed into the organization’s operations as learning, thus completing a feedback loop–which brings us to our last best practice.

Adopt a learning mentality: Even as our industry scrambles to service solar portfolios that are doubling in size every year, it is critical for asset managers to see the forest through the trees. After the session, one asset manager drew an analogy to medicine: “Today, a lot of O&M issue handling is really about treating symptoms, but we are not yet curing the underlying disease. In order to cure the disease, we must learn about what these symptoms share in common.” For instance, beyond simply fixing problematic systems as they arise, identifying underlying trends to learn that Installer X is systematically causing these problems will enable you to take corrective action up front.

kWh Analytics is helping our industry to “cure the disease.” We enable solar investors and asset managers to take control of their risk management and reporting through a web-based portfolio management platform. The platform delivers risk insights from 40,000+ PV systems, representing the industry’s largest independent database of operating solar assets. The firm’s clients include several of the leading solar originators and financial institutions.

Top 10 most read solar articles by your peers this week!

These are the top 10 most read solar articles by your peers this week!

#1 Wall Street Cheat Sheet: 3 Reasons Why Solar Energy Is One of America’s Hottest 

#2 Think Progress: Arizona’s New Solar Charge Is ‘Unsupportable By Any Economic Analysis,’ SolarCity Says

#3 PV-Magazine: AES targets distributed PV, storage with purchase of Main Street

#4 Business Journals: Solar installer RGS Energy to cut 30% of staff, reorganize

#5 Seeking Alpha: Vivint Solar – Increasing Focus On Downstream Integration

#6 PV-Tech: Trina Solar to spin-off downstream business

#7 Bloomberg: Conergy Sees 450 Megawatts of Solar Installs in 2015, CEO Says

#8 Renew Economy: Carbon crash, solar dawn – Deutsche Bank on why solar has already won

#9 Business Spectator: Utility-solar gets a boost in the South

#10 EDF: Why solar panels are becoming a middle-class commodity

For more insight on this week’s top news stories, subscribe to the email. The insight is reserved for email subscribers and is not posted on the web. The Top 10 is ranked by the number of SolarWakeup.com readers that clicked on the news article during the previous week.  

Have a great weekend!

Yann