Steering sunbeams

A photovoltaic array is a linked assembly of P...
Image via Wikipedia

Solar power is becoming less of a luxury

JUST below your correspondent’s hillside home in southern California, a house is being rebuilt with all the latest thinking in materials technology and construction codes. Much has changed in the eight years since your correspondent did the same. Most strikingly, the house below has a gleaming white roof of fireproof chippings embedded in a mastic undercoating. With summer temperatures in the nineties (32ºC and up), these new reflective coatings are said to reduce air-conditioning bills by 20% or more. Not content with that, the owner has added a five-kilowatt bank of solar panels.

Eighteen months ago, your correspondent ran the numbers to see what it would cost to use photovoltaic solar panels to replace the 8,300 kilowatt-hours of electricity he buys annually from the grid. Economically, solar turned out to be a dud. The 6.4 kilowatts of capacity needed would have cost $48,000 for the panels alone—and half as much again by the time the mounting frames, switching modules, power controller, fault protector, DC-to-AC inverter, service panel and installation charges had been included.

Admittedly, there would have been $14,000 worth of government grants to soften the blow. But even then, repayment of the loan (or the opportunity cost of paying cash) would have worked out at more than $600 a month over ten years—all to save a paltry $75 a month in electricity charges. With his conscience still twinging, your correspondent decided to buy a couple of tons of carbon offsets for a total of $70 a year and have done with it.

Now he’s not so sure. The price of carbon offsets has risen slightly, to around $50 a ton. So has the price of juice in his part of the country, to 12.2 cents per kilowatt-hour. And the borrowing costs of home-improvement loans have fallen, too. Moreover, two other factors have tipped the balance somewhat in solar’s favour.

One is the amount of government rebate now available. Starting this year, homeowners who install solar panels qualify for a 30% tax credit on the cost after state and other incentives have been deducted. A second factor is the tumbling price of the solar panels themselves. Eighteen months ago, typical 200-watt modules cost around $1,500 apiece retail. Today, such panels can be bought for $600 or less. The recession, plus the enormous oversupply caused by the surge of new factories in China and elsewhere making photovoltaic panels, have created spectacular deals for consumers.

Read more . . .

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

1 comment on “Steering sunbeams”

  1. [...] This post was Twitted by australiansolar [...]

Leave a comment

Archives

IT Random Post

  • In Innovation, U.S. Said to Be Losing Competitive Edge - Canada Ranks 16th out of 40

    Cover via AmazonThe competitive edge of the United States economy has eroded sharply over the last decade, according to a new study by a nonpartisan research group.The report by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation found that the United States ranked sixth among 40 countries and
  • Invisibility Cloak And Ultra-powerful Microscopes: New Research Field Promises Radical Advances In Optical Technologies

    [caption id="" align="alignright" width="202" caption="Image via Wikipedia"][/caption] A new research field called transformation optics may usher in a host of radical advances including a cloak of invisibility and ultra-powerful microscopes and computers by harnessing nanotechnology and "m
  • Nissan Unveils Leaf, an Electric Car

    Image by Getty Images via Daylife Nissan closely guarded just about everything about its new battery electric car, until finally introducing it in Yokohama over the weekend. But now we know: It’s called Leaf, with a connotation of cleaning the air. “You wouldn’t believe how much work we h
  • Really Unusually Uncertain

    Image via Wikipedia By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN Over the past few weeks I’ve had a chance to speak with senior economic policy makers in America and Germany and I think I’ve figured out where we are. It’s like this: things are getting better, except where they aren’t. The bailouts are wor
  • Taxi Tidbits and Techno-Tales

    Image by Narisa via Flickr This week, I had the honor of hosting a most unusual panel. It was at the annual conference of the International Association of Transport Regulators—basically, the governing bodies of taxi systems all over the world—and it was hosted by the New York Taxi &

Categories

77 visitors online now
47 guests, 30 bots, 0 members
Max visitors today: 82 at 12:01 am EDT
This month: 142 at 09-01-2010 11:03 pm EDT
This year: 214 at 08-29-2010 10:20 pm EDT
All time: 214 at 08-29-2010 10:20 pm EDT
Blog WebMastered by All in One Webmaster.