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Party for Solar Incentives

By Solar Incentives by State No Comments

The industry association for solar companies is looking for a new CEO. Here at Solar.com, we’ve got a little advice for the next commander in chief. Throw more parties! Wouldn’t you throw a party if you were making money for yourself and all your friends?

Look at what’s been happening lately in solar.

December 2015: Congress and President Obama preserve a tax credit so any household or small business that goes solar in the next three and a half years gets a 30 percent refund, straight from the government.

January: California extends a state program called net metering that lets homeowners and small businesses sell solar energy back to the electric company at the rate they pay when buying energy from the grid.

This month: New Hampshire extends its net metering program. Then Massachusetts does the same thing.

Most people can see that solar incentives are beneficial, but it can be hard to translate the value of these incentives into dollars and cents if you don’t know how much it costs to install solar or to purchase electricity.

Don’t worry. We got this.

‘Show Me the Money’

For the average solar installation, the value of the solar tax credit is about $6,700.

For the average homeowner in California who produces enough solar energy to cover all household energy needs, net metering is worth about $1,200 a year.

In New Hampshire, where the average home consumes more energy, net metering is worth about $1,300 a year.

In Massachusetts, where people consume more energy and pay a higher price, net metering is worth about $1,400 a year.

DIY Solar Research

Solar incentives can vary a lot as you move around the US from state to state, based on the amount of energy you use and how much you pay for it. We’ll show you how to find all the information needed to see what the incentives look like in your neighborhood. Or use our bid generator to see how much you can save by going solar, and let us customize the value of the incentives for your home.

Solar Installation Prices

Every year, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab publishes a report on solar installations in the US called Tracking The Sun. The latest report, released last summer, shows an average residential system size of 6.2 kilowatts (kW). It also shows an average residential system price of $4.30 per Watt (W) — but the average Solar.com customer gets $3.60 per W.

Let’s do a little math, using Solar.com prices. (Note that 6.2 kW = 6,200 W.)

Average system size                Average price             Average total price

6,200 W                             ×          3.60                     =          $22,320

If you see that the average size and average price of a solar installation are different in your home state, replace the numbers to calculate a new average system price. Then, for the fun part, multiply by 30 percent (.30) to find out the value of your solar tax credit.

Electricity Prices

The US Department of Energy provides a huge amount of information about electricity prices on its website. To estimate the annual value of net metering credits in your state, you’ll need to know how much energy people usually consume and how much they pay for it. Start by downloading a table from the Dept. of Energy showing average monthly consumption for each US state. Remember to multiply by 12 to get average annual consumption.

Then visit the webpage where the Dept. of Energy shows average residential electricity prices, with new updates every month.

Multiply average annual consumption by the average electricity price to estimate the yearly value of net metering. Here’s an example using figures from California.

Monthly consumption Annual consumption Electricity price Value of net metering

562 kWh × 12 = 6,744 kWh × $0.1776 per kWh = $1,198

If math isn’t your thing, it’s cool. Use our bid generator. Copy our homework.

Then, let’s party!

SolarCity Pulls Plug on MyPower

By Solar Loans: Financing Rates, Loan Terms, and More No Comments

Several weeks ago, SolarCity announced that they would be abandoning their flagship solar loan product, MyPower.  Considering the product was a pretty poor deal for their customers, this announcement should be caused to celebrate.  However, such a celebration might be premature.  Though SolarCity did announce the development of a newly revamped loan product, it seems unlikely that it will translate to any significant benefit for prospective customers.  Let’s take a look at why this is the case.

MyPower Was a Tough Sell

In 2014 when MyPower was initially rolled out, SolarCity anticipated that 50% of their company’s solar installs would be financed by solar loans by the end of the next year.  However, when that time eventually came, loans only covered a meager 13% of all installs.  MyPower didn’t perform as well as anticipated due to several obstacles that deterred its widespread acceptance.  

First and most significantly was the fact that many potential customers couldn’t qualify for the 30% Investment Tax Credit that MyPower was designed around.  Even if customers did qualify, there was the matter of the highly undesirable 2.9% annual escalator to contend with.  Last of all was MyPower’s, entirely nonsensical 30-year loan term.  Generally, loans have a term of about 10 years, with the more iffy loans carrying a term of 20.  Add the outcomes of recent net metering rulings, with even more pro-solar states such as California only grandfathering net metering for 20 years, and it becomes clear that the 30-year loan term was wildly off the mark.  When considering these factors, it’s almost surprising that MyPower sold as well as it did.  

Not a Good Deal for Anybody

Even if MyPower was widely adopted, that may not have been good news for SolarCity.  In their analysis of the product, Seeking Alpha called MyPower “a proven value destroyer [that] must be discontinued sooner than later”.  According to them, this is because MyPower is riddled with even more flaws than the PPAs that it was meant to replace.  Chief among these flaws is the fact that SolarCity sells its MyPower systems for a minute up-front cost. When combined with the fact that it is easy for customers to keep their federal tax credit rather than surrendering it as intended to SolarCity, it becomes highly possible that SolarCity could lose big with MyPower.  

SolarCity Facing Uncertainty in Changing Market

The last few months have not been kind to SolarCity.  Seeking Alpha and Investors.com have noted that the industry heavyweight has been facing diminishing growth in the face of plummeting stock value, and unfavorable net metering rulings in several key solar states.  Nevada’s PUC ruling, in particular, has hurt SolarCity, as they were forced out of the state due to a quickly evaporating solar market, leaving SolarCity hurting for cash.  

Implications

Considering MyPower’s significant flaws, making it difficult to market and a questionable investment for both customers and themselves, and the increased pressure to perform provided by slowing growth and the latest net metering rulings, it’s only logical that SolarCity moves to eliminate MyPower.  The question left to us is, “What will it be replaced with?”  While we know little in regard to the specifics of what the new loan product will look like, we can venture an educated guess based on the situation SolarCity faces, and what their executives have stated.  

Based on increasingly dire straits they find themselves in, as well as their own stated issues with MyPower, it seems they will do their best to make MyPower’s replacement a simple and easy sell in order to expand their pool of qualified applicants.  To ensure this, the new product certainly won’t rely on the investment tax credit that many failed to qualify for.  It will have a shorter loan term, to be more in line with industry standards of around 10 years, rather than the outrageous 30-year term that deterred so many customers from their last product.  Also potentially up for review is the unattractive 2.9% escalator, that was acknowledged as being a “mistake”.  These changes will remove the three main obstacles SolarCity faced while selling the MyPower product.  However, the changes do nothing to address the aspects of MyPower that made it such a miserable deal for their customers.

In fact, it seems unlikely that SolarCity will do anything to make MyPower more financially sound.  SolarCity executives continue to allege that MyPower is the “best savings [they] can offer”, and assert that the new product will be “no better for a customer in terms of financials”.  Thus it seems that changes being implemented for MyPower’s replacement will only make the new product simpler (for SolarCity to sell).  Considering the incredibly unfavorable financials of the original MyPower product, we wouldn’t hold our breaths in hopes that SolarCity will put out a new loan product that will turn out to be a solid investment.