New Report From Rocky Mountain Institute Identifies Opportunities For Sustained Solar PV Market Growth
Snowmass, Colorado (PRWEB) November 26, 2014 -- Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) released a report today, "Bridges to New Solar Business Models: Opportunities to Increase and Capture the Value of Distributed Solar Photovoltaics", investigating the opportunities for utilities and solar companies to work together to unlock the full value of distributed solar for customers and the grid.
Solar photovoltaics (PV) are growing rapidly in the U.S.—by the end of 2013, over 12 GW of PV were in operation, an 80 percent increase since the end of 2010, with grid-connected customer-sited installations totaling more than 50 percent of nationwide installed capacity. Yet, nationally, solar produces only 0.2 percent of electricity generation—still far from the U.S. Department of Energy’s SunShot Initiative target of 14 percent of electricity generation from solar by 2030.
Solar policies to date have typically focused on value flowing primarily to individual customers and third-party solar companies who install distributed solar PV systems, while utilities associate those systems with transaction costs, grid operation challenges, and revenue loss. As a result, fierce debates between solar companies and utilities about the future of these policies are playing out across the country.
“Accelerating adoption further and creating a sustainable long-term distributed solar PV market will require taking a holistic perspective,” said RMI principal Virginia Lacy, a co-author on the report. “Major opportunities exist to build on current growth strategies to expand the market that cannot be considered if utilities or solar companies choose to act on their own.”
RMI, with support from the Department of Energy (DOE) SunShot Initiative, worked with both utilities and solar companies to highlight approaches for increasing value of distributed solar PV with three essential “building blocks” for new solar business models that decrease costs and expand benefits as solar is integrated into the electric grid. Those building blocks include:
• Making distributed solar PV available to a much broader customer base with new options for procurement
• Designing distributed solar systems so they better align with customer and grid needs—including deploying distributed solar PV projects when and where they are most needed on the grid
• Leveraging solar PV adoption to increase the uptake of other distributed energy resource technologies—such as energy efficiency, battery energy storage, demand response, and smart thermostats—to meet the needs of both customers and the grid
“Current growth strategies have helped the distributed solar PV market scale considerably, but major opportunities exist to expand the market further and could be missed if market players continue to view the picture through a narrow lens,” said RMI manager and report co-author Mathias Bell. “If done well, solar companies and utilities working together to deploy solutions can create significant additional value, which will help provide solutions to ongoing debates and accelerate the adoption of distributed solar.”
While addressing some of these issues will require both pricing realignment and regulatory model reform, these reforms may take significant time and resources. Meanwhile, utilities, solar companies, and regulators can design and implement components of solar business model strategies today that provide a bridge to the future.
Download the full report here.
About Rocky Mountain Institute
Since 1982, Rocky Mountain Institute has advanced market-based solutions that transform global energy use to create a clean, prosperous and secure future. An independent, nonprofit think-and-do tank, RMI engages with businesses, communities and institutions to accelerate and scale replicable solutions that drive the cost-effective shift from fossil fuels to efficiency and renewables. Please visit http://www.rmi.org for more information.
Kirsten Carlson, Rocky Mountain Institute, +1 (970) 927-7804, [email protected]
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