The Flip Side to
Solar
By: Van Dwinnells
Electric Utility companies rely on selling power to those of
us on the grid. As the green movement
has swept the nation, independence and interdependence have become new
possibilities for many consumers especially so as the push for photovoltaic
solar panels has generated consistently more affordable and highly efficiency models. This effectively allows an individual(s) the
opportunity to offset their usage from the grid. By this I refer to their ability to minimize
their overall consumption even to the point that the individuals could sell
back energy to the utility company. In
some cases, with the use of storage batteries and generators, some may even be
able to survive completely off the grid.
It is important to understand this process monetarily in
order to grasp how solar energy may negatively impact us in the recent
future.
"Solar power peaks at midday, which means it is strongest close to
the point of highest electricity use — “peak load.” Problem is, providing power
to meet peak load is where utilities make a huge chunk of their money. Peak
power is the most expensive power. So when solar panels provide peak power,
they aren’t just reducing demand, they’re reducing demand for the
utilities’ most valuable product."
This is great for those that can sell back, as they are in
essence buying power on the low and selling high. Basically, as solar power becomes more
prevalent, peak power rates the utility companies charge will increasingly
become more volatile to the market.
In the past they have had very
steady business models. In essence, the
more that solar power is utilized throughout the nation, the greater the peak
power rates will be. For those
individuals that solely rely on the grid, this will mean a dramatic increases
in their rates in order for the utility companies to remain profitable. Until we can almost completely offset the
rather still high costs of photovoltaic systems, many citizens with average to
low annual incomes will be forced to pay much higher rates to heat and cool
their homes. As David Roberts puts it,
"As
ratepayers opt for solar panels (and other distributed energy resources like
micro-turbines, batteries, smart appliances, etc.), it raises costs
on other ratepayers and hurts the utility’s credit rating. As rates rise on
other ratepayers, the attractiveness of solar increases, so more opt for it.
Thus costs on remaining ratepayers are even further increased, the utility’s
credit even further damaged. It’s a vicious, self-reinforcing cycle:"
This will either lead to some dramatic changes in the
Utility companies methods for profit generation or manufacturers and technology
must soon meet the challenge to provide low cost and available solar
systems. More information can be found
in the following.
The Edison Electric Institute released their Disruptive Challenges: Financial
Implications and Strategic Responses to a Changing Retail Electric Business article
bringing light to such implications. It
can be found here. http://www.eei.org/ourissues/finance/Documents/disruptivechallenges.pdf
Quotes and more emphasis can be found here:
I want say that this article is very nice and very informative article.I will make sure to be reading your blog more.
ReplyDeleteHome Solar Power Systems
Solar Pool Heating
Solar Las Vegas
Solar Power Installation Companies