China may currently be the world’s largest producer of solar panels
and a solar farm leader. However, it ranks low in terms of how much
small-scale rooftop solar is being deployed within the country. This may
soon change. Rooftop solar might even compare to other countries due to a new
funding model which allows buyers to have panels installed at no cost.
Reuters
reports third-party financing models used in the United States could
help expand rooftop solar in China. Consider this factor and some timely
rooftop electricity deals, all accompanied by overall lower costs of solar.
Rooftop Solar Growth, Spurred By Business Agreements & Electricity Cost
China is targeting elevation of its solar capacity from 28 GW in 2014 to 100 GW by 2020.
But interest from households and businesses has been lower than
desired — in part, because of hurdles like high installation costs, the
difficulty in obtaining rooftop rights, and statutory limits on leases.
Germany’s Federal Network Agency,
the regulatory office for electricity, gas, telecommunications, post
and railway markets, reports small-scale installations in China
accounted for just 17% of installed solar capacity at the end of 2014.
By contrast, small-scale installation in Germany accounted for 70% of
capacity.
A handful of timely business deals may alter this energy landscape.
Singapore-based real estate investment firm Redwood Group has recently launched a 248 kW pilot project in China, where it owns more than half a million square meters of roof space. Redwood has signed a power purchase agreement with New York-based
solar developer UGE International (UGEI) and its financing partner,
Hong-Kong’s Blue Sky Energy Efficiency Co. Under the Redwood deal, UGEI
and Blue Sky can lease rooftop space from Redwood to operate solar
panels, where the companies can then sell electricity back to Redwood at
prices below grid rates.
“The time is right now for solar on rooftop in China because the cost
of putting a system on the roof is becoming much more attractive,” said
Blue Sky chief executive Tianyu Sieh. Reuters reports UGEI and Blue Sky have also partnered with
global real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle in China to offer
the same model to its portfolio of commercial clients. “The benefits are going to be around avoided capital, reduced costs,
or cost predictability, branding benefits,” Matthew Clifford, the head
of Energy and Sustainability Services for North Asia at Jones Lang
LaSalle, said.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/12/09/new-funding-model-may-boost-rooftop-solar-china/
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