Installed utility-scale solar project costs
have fallen by about 50%, from $6.3 per AC-W to $3.1 per AC-W, since
2009 for solar projects completed in 2014, Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) said on Sept. 30. According to Berkeley Lab’s recent report, Utility-Scale Solar 2014, some solar projects built in 2014 were priced as low as $2 per AC-W.
Projects completed in 2013 performed at an average capacity factor of
29.4 percent in 2014, the report said, adding that projects built in
2011 and 2012 had an average 2014 capacity factor of 24.5% and 26.3%,
respectively. Authored by Berkeley Lab researchers Mark Bolinger and Joachim Seel,
and funded by the U.S. Department of Energy’s SunShot Initiative, the
annual report identifies trends in project costs, performance and
pricing of ground-mounted U.S. solar projects larger than 5 MW.
The report determined that solar project owners are regularly
securing power purchases agreements (PPAs) at prices of 5 cents per kWh
or less, and declines in PPA prices are making utility-scale projects
competitive in states with very little solar development.
According to the report, there were nearly 45,000 MW of solar
capacity in regional transmission operators’ interconnection queues
across the U.S. at the end of 2014. In addition, of those projects in
queue that receive regulatory approval, most would likely reach
commercial operation prior to 2017, when the 30 percent federal
investment tax credit is set to decline to 10 percent.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2015/09/berkeley-lab-utility-scale-solar-project-costs-down-50-since-2009.html
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