By David Labrador
In the face of rising retail prices for grid electricity, investing
in solar-plus-battery systems can insulate grid-connected customers from
those increasing prices and effectively lock in a peak price that won’t
continue to climb, according to a recent analysis
by RMI. The result for customers across diverse geographies will be
substantial savings relative to what they would have paid for a
full-fare utility bill.
For utilities and regulators this will be
challenging—and present an opportunity. RMI’s April 2015 report The Economics of Load Defection
analyzed five U.S. markets out to 2050. It found that investing in
combinations of solar and batteries will enable individual customers to
contain electricity costs regardless of how high retail grid prices
rise. Solar prices and battery prices are dropping and the trend is
expected to continue for both. “The customer can now choose to install a
solar system to lower their price. As the price goes down, they have
the ability to install an even larger system to self-supply more power,”
says Bodhi Rader, a senior associate with RMI’s electricity practice
and coauthor of the report. In essence, customers can buy a smaller
“starter kit” now and expand or upgrade periodically, as grid
electricity prices rise and solar and battery systems grow steadily
cheaper.
Solar-only systems are still exposed to rising retail electricity
prices and favorable export policies and compensation from their
utility; they export surplus daytime generation to the grid and buy back
electricity at night when solar panels aren’t generating. But, Rader
says, “where things really get game-changing is when you add in the
batteries. Now you can directly use all the solar power you generate.”
With batteries, a customer can store the solar system’s daytime surplus
to use later and self-consume a greater percentage (up to 100 percent)
of the output of the rooftop PV. Solar-plus-battery-system owners only
require grid electricity during extended periods of bad weather or at
times of very high demand, almost entirely insulating them from rising
grid prices.
Economic in Every Market
RMI’s analysis looked at five electricity markets out to 2050 (see
figure below). The markets—Westchester County, NY; Louisville, KY; San
Antonio, TX; Los Angeles, CA; and Honolulu, HI—have varying grid
electricity prices and solar resources. Even so, “you see
solar-plus-battery systems having an economic advantage even in the
parts of the country that have the lowest electricity prices, because
entrepreneurs and innovators are driving the costs of these technologies
down,” says Leia Guccione, a manager with RMI’s electricity practice
and another of the report’s coauthors. “Solar is going to be incredibly
competitive in 2020 and beyond,” she adds.
The cost of electricity to grid-connected solar-plus-battery owners
rises little over time, and what little rise they see is mostly due to
the portion of their load that they must continue to meet with grid
electricity. So in sunny Los Angeles and Honolulu, the monthly cost to a
solar-plus-battery owner will barely rise in the 20 years between 2030
and 2050. Customers in those markets who rely entirely on the grid,
meanwhile, will see their monthly costs rise from $192 to $348 and $702
to $1,269, respectively, over the same period. (Honolulu suffers from
some of the highest grid electricity costs in the country and customers
there are leaders in solar PV adoption as a result.)
Likewise, the difference between the cost of grid-connected
solar-plus-battery systems in the two markets is largely due to the
price difference between the portions of their loads that are met with
grid electricity: $0.18/kWh in Los Angeles versus $0.36/kWh in Honolulu,
at today’s rates. “The cost of a solar-plus-battery system in these
five very different places is really not that different,” says Guccione.
What is different is the abundance of sunshine. So while
grid-connected solar-plus-battery owners in Los Angeles and Honolulu
will see their costs rise only seven percent and four percent,
respectively, between 2030 and 2050, customers in markets with longer
spells of cloudy weather will rely more on the grid and be less
insulated from rising grid prices. In Louisville and Westchester, the
corresponding cost increases to solar-plus-battery owners will be 57
percent and 19 percent, respectively: from $150 to $236 and from $269 to
$319. Again, this is due to the greater portion of their load that
still must be met with grid electricity.
And make no mistake: even customers in cloudy markets will save
greatly by adopting solar-plus-battery systems if recent trends of
increasing retail prices continue. Those in Louisville and Westchester
who rely entirely on the grid will see their monthly costs rise from
$161 to $290 and from $359 to $649, respectively, over the same period.
An Easy Choice for Customers
RMI’s analysis shows that, by 2050, customers who invest in
solar-plus-battery systems will save about $1,000, $2,000, $4,000, or
even $11,000 every year, depending on the market. That’s a powerful
incentive and it’s something that customers, utilities, and regulators
will need to reckon with.
For customers, investing in solar photovoltaics and battery energy
storage is “something that the customer really does need to think about.
It’s becoming more and more mainstream every year,” says Rader, and
after about 2020 it will be powerfully economically attractive. “Your
own system is decreasing your reliance on a grid that’s getting more
expensive.” Guccione adds: “These distributed energy resources are going
to put another tool in the toolkit of families in America to manage
their expenses.”
An Opportunity for Utilities
But while there is a clear benefit to customers, utilities are faced with a challenge—and
a choice. As residential and commercial customers follow their economic
interest and invest in solar-plus-battery systems, utilities can choose
to discourage them or to integrate and utilize their systems (see
figure below) There is still time for utilities to choose between these two pathways, but the window will close as more customers add solar-plus-battery systems.
If customers are discouraged with things like fixed charges and a lack of compensation for exporting surplus power to the grid, more and more of them will become true grid defectors,
choosing to rely on their own systems. This would lead to excess
investment in the electric system as a whole, among other
inefficiencies. Stand-alone solar-plus-battery systems must be larger
and more expensive than grid-connected ones, while electric utilities
that don’t take advantage of the customer-sited, solar-plus-battery
systems at their disposal will need to invest far more in grid assets,
which may then be stranded by further grid defection.
There is another path for utilities, however. “There’s an opportunity
for them to embrace this as a game-changing opportunity and play a
major role—rather than fight the trends—and the utilities that do so
will find themselves come out ahead,” says Rader. Guccione explains,
“there’s an opportunity for utilities to create avenues for customers to
offer their home energy systems to the utility in a way that can be
advantageous to the whole system.”
Distributed energy resources like solar PV and battery energy storage
can make grids more reliable, more resilient, and less costly to
maintain, but only if they are grid-connected and intelligently
integrated. Doing so, in turn, creates more value
from the distributed resources: “In the sharing economy, people are
making better use of underutilized resources, whether it be their homes
through AirBnB or whether it be their cars through services like Uber
and Lyft,” says Guccione.
Rader says that, in the same way,
“Utilities can take an active role in making sure this transformation
works to the best result for the grid as a whole.” They are in the best
position to provide the coordination that is crucial to making
distributed resources work in harmony, which is the essence of the
utilities’ role as distributed system platform operators under New York’s REV proceeding.
“A utility has a built-up relationship with the customer that’s unique
to them. No other company out there, a solar installer, a battery
installer, or any company has that,” says Rader. “At the very least,
they can serve as brokers that help customers understand their options.”
Regulators Can Open the Door
But first, utilities will need an assist from regulators, says
Guccione: “In order for utilities to fully take advantage of these
distributed energy resources as they’re deployed on the grid, it’s going
to require new rate structures and it’s going to require new business
models.” Some states are experimenting
with such advances in regulation, and not a moment too soon. “Right now
there are no clear mechanisms and markets for utilities to work with
customers who have highly capable distributed energy systems that can be
used to provide services back to the grid. Regulators really need to
revisit the rules of engagement between utilities and customers,” says
Guccione.
The large and growing savings delivered by grid-connected
solar-plus-battery systems will drive their adoption by myriad users.
But to realize the full value of these systems, Guccione says,
“Utilities have to be afforded the opportunity to leverage and, to some
extent, guide the deployment of assets on their systems.” Much more is
at stake than peak price for customers; the future of the grid is at a
fork in the road.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/10/06/solar-plus-battery-systems-can-insulate-customers-from-increasing-prices/
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