Households gear up for next phase of the solar revolution
Solar
panels are landing on rooftops just as the Hills Hoist invaded backyards. If
you're not solar-powered, you're not with it.
In
a few days' time the United Nations climate change conference will start in
Paris, taking up where the previous talks in Copenhagen failed.
In
the six years since Copenhagen, the cost of solar panels has plummeted and
battery technology has improved dramatically. If households can generate
electricity by day and then store it to use in the evening, it
would revolutionise electricity distribution.
There
are forecasts of a coming boom in solar batteries to rival the boom in panel
installation of the first Kevin Rudd era. US-based Greentech Media claims
Australia will be a leader in installing batteries, forecasting solar storage
capacity to rise from 6.6 megawatts to 75 megawatts in
2016, hitting 800 megawatts by 2020.
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As
the costs of panels and batteries keep falling, who would pay an energy company
45¢ a kilowatt hour when you can generate the power yourself, with some
assistance from the sun, for 8¢ to 12¢ a kilowatt hour?
Especially
when it's never been easier, or cheaper, to finance a solar installation. The
other thing that's changed since Copenhagen, and Australia's previous solar
boom, is the rise of leasing or pay-as-you-go options.

Still,
solar panels aren't always as kind to your pocket as they are to the
environment. If you buy a system that's too big they can even lift
your bill when, for the first time, electricity prices are falling.
And
if you're planning on putting your feet up by selling your solar power to the
energy company, I wouldn't.
As
a rule solar pays off after five years in Sydney and seven in Melbourne due to
the difference in the amount of sun in each city. Let's not go there. It's also
because Melbourne has cheaper conventional power so the benefit is also
slightly less.
These
payback periods stack up well against other investments that don't have the
feel-good green benefits. For most shares and investment properties the payback
period is more like 10 years or longer.
The
panels should be good for at least 25 years, though parts of the system might
need replacing after a decade.
Looked
at another way – which is to say dispassionately by me – in Sydney it's a 15
per cent annual return after tax on your investment.
Financing
options for solar
Then
again, these days you can lease a solar system and, in NSW only, you can get
one that's as free as the sunshine itself in return for buying all the power it
generates. More on that later.
Leasing
a system works pretty much like car finance so interest is built into the
monthly payments. Typically at the end of the lease you'll be able to buy the
system outright at its depreciated value.
An
advantage is that you never have to worry about maintenance, not that there's
much anyway. The reason the panels are tilted is so they self-clean when it
rains.
Roughly
speaking, a leased system will cost you about 15¢ a kilowatt hour. That
compares with 8¢ to 12¢ if you generate your own power – about
what you pay off-peak from the grid. Trouble is, the grid's version of off-peak
is different to your own. Do you really want to do the washing at 11pm?
Oh,
and did I mention the grid price can be as high as 46¢ a kilowatt in peak
periods?
"The
rule of thumb, depending where you are, is that the cost to you from solar will
be 8¢ to 12¢ a kilowatt hour which avoids 25 to
30¢ [conventionally]," says Damien Moyse, policy and research manager
at the Alternative Technology Association.
Energy
companies are even offering Harvey Norman-style interest-free terms though
there is a small deposit. Origin Energy, for example, charges $199 upfront plus
monthly interest-free payments for two years – a total cost of $3295 for a
two kilowatt system.
The
cheapest personal loan is Hunter United's green saver loan at 9.74 per cent.
So
if you don't have the cash, the cheapest way to go solar is putting it on the
mortgage. Next comes leasing.
Hang
on, what was that about a free solar system? Under a power purchase agreement
you have to buy what the system generates, even if you don't use it. While the
charge will be higher than solar costs, it'll still be less than the energy
company's regular electricity.
Choose
the wrong-sized system for your home, however, and the payback period can be
longer than half your working life, which would detract somewhat from the
warm inner glow of doing the right thing.
"The
payback range is huge – it can be five years to longer than the asset life,
which is 25 to 30 years," Moyse says.
"If
you're at work so the only power you're using during the day is the fridge,
forget solar. Like to burn the midnight oil? Sorry, solar's not for you."
That's
without batteries of course. It's not economic just yet to store the
energy your solar panels generate, but it's close.
Next
month Enphase Energy will roll out a system that can store solar
energy and lets you monitor your consumption.
Tesla,
of electric car fame, will roll out a battery next year as well but don't hold
your breath. Although the price of solar batteries is falling it's still
prohibitive for the average home. And they have less than half the life of the
panels.
"International
forecasts show an 8 to 10 per cent drop per annum in the battery price. By 2020
you'll be able to have a battery economically," Moyse predicts.
Solar
costs falling
Just
as people touting the benefits of solar can sometimes be selective, there are
also some urban myths about the cost.
Many
people believe that it's become more expensive because government
subsidies are falling. In fact the cost of installing a system has fallen
faster than the government subsidies.
A
1.5 kilowatt system, which should satisfy about one-third of the average
household's electricity consumption, costs between $3000 to $6000. A souped-up
five kilowatt affair, probably enough to light up a whole suburb,
will cost $7000 to $11,500.
Incidentally
the reason for the big price range for each size is that a lot depends on how
many panels you need, what your roof is made of, and sundry things such as
whether you need a new meter and wiring or trees have to be removed.
Most
systems installed are under three kilowatts, according to a survey by
Choice last year. The average cost was $8783.
These
costs take into account the federal incentive of small-scale technology
certificates, which trade in the market like shares. These are credits for every
megawatt hour it's estimated your system will be able to generate over the next
15 years.
Usually
they're "sold" to the installer, who gives you a discount of the same
amount. Energy companies buy the certificates because they count towards their
mandated renewable energy target and are cheaper than building wind farms.
If
you're keen enough you can hang on to them and sell them in the market though
it involves more paperwork. The price is set by the market and so bobs about
but for all intents and purposes is capped at $40. Quotes are available from Trade in Green or Green Bank. When I looked the
price was about $39.
Another
myth is that you need lots of sun. The truth is that you can have too much.
Solar operates most efficiently at 25 degrees, but roofs can get as hot as 60
degrees.
"It's
a very harsh environment on the roof. Over the years the rubber perishes and
seals wear. That can allow water to get in, especially when it's humid,"
says Darren Gladman, policy manager at the Clean Energy Council.
He recommends a service check by an installer every five years.
Funnily
enough the best place for solar is Antarctica, where there's night-long sun in
summer but not much heat. Nor, I daresay, many mod cons.
Solar
works on cloudy days too, although less efficiently.