Title: Residential Solar Power in Midwest
1Residential Solar Power in Midwest
- Patrick Chapman
- Associate Professor
- University of Illinois at
- Urbana-Champaign
2Example Illinois Energy Picture
- Dominated by nuclear, coal
- Some wind power
- Solar power ltlt 1
- New Illinois Power Agency reportedly
- Requires 25 of Illinois energy from renewable
sources by 2025 - Requires 2 by June 1, 2008
- 75 of this must be wind
- Governs net metering and other aspects of power
3Illinois Energy
2006 data 5th in population 10.37/kWh
residential 18 GWh of generation 17.3 GWh coal
nuke
4Illinois Solar Map
4000 Wh/m2 per day Source DOE
5More-Detailed Maps
Provided by Angus Rockett, Univ. of Illinois
6Growth Internationally
Chart from US Photovoltaic Industry Roadmap
(NREL, 2001).
7PVWatts (NREL)
- Based on collected solar data (only select years)
- More reliable that clear-sky calculations
- Available for certain sites
- Specifications
- Tilt latitude
- Azimuth true south
- 0.77 derating factor
- Solar Advisor Model from NREL
8PV Economic Viability
- Varies from place to place
- Solar radiation
- Cloud cover
- Price of electricity
- Real-time pricing vs. fixed pricing
- Installation costs (labor)
- Demand for modules
- Availability of installers
- Rebates and incentives
9Calculations for Select Sites
- For a 1-kW array
- Rockford 1212 kWh/yr (0.089/kWh)
- Springfield 1281 kWh/yr
- Quick multiplier 1250 kWh/yr/kW-installed
- Long Beach 1449 kWh/yr (0.136/kWh)
- Tucson 1617 kWh/yr
- Portland, ME 1280 kWh/yr (0.128/kWh)
- National average in 2007 0.097/kWh (all
sectors) Hawaii is about 0.21/kWh
10Specifications
- Tilt
- Tilt latitude good rule of thumb
- Slightly shallower is optimal
- Diffuse and reflected light are significant
- Azimuth
- True south optimal
- /- 15 degrees OK
- Watch out for magnetic south
- Derating 77 typical starting point
- PV module hero numbers (few , temperature)
- Inverter efficiency (94)
- Wires (98-99)
- Dirt, aging (few )
- Mismatches (few )
11PV Module Efficiency
- Ratio of electrical power out to sunlight power
in - Notice, not included in specifications
- Somewhat overrated figure of merit
- Higher efficiency smaller space
- Higher efficiency higher cost (usually)
- Key figure of merit is /W or /Wh
- Aesthetics also important
- 10 to 14 typical for silicon
- 22 for SunPower modules
12Illinois Rebate Programs
- State rebate program
- 30 of project costs
- Maxes out at 10,000 ltltlt Note, taxable grant
- Limited budget (ran out of money last FY)
- Straightforward application, but takes time/care
- Federal tax credit
- 30 of project costs
- Maxes out at 2,000
- Commercial similar programs
- Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation
- Other, larger scale projects
13Case Study in Urbana
- 2.87-kW array
- Based on Springfield data
- 3669 kWh/yr
- 30-degree tilt (pitch 7x12)
- 15 degrees west of south
- 0.77 derating (conservative)
- SunPower system
- 14 205-watt modules
- 3300-watt inverter
14Photos Case Study
15More Photos
16More Photos
17More Photos (Inverter and Monitor)
18Finished Project
19Connecting to Ameren
- Somewhat complicated, but cooperative
- Register with FERC as QF
- Qualifying Facility
- Self-certify not difficult, just annoying
- Submit schematic and specs to Ameren
- Pay 100
- Their engineer will approve drawings
- Sign connection agreement
- Can request waivers on insurance, etc.
- Sign QF Rider agreement
- Pick real-time pricing or normal rates (333
meter)
20Example Schematic
21Real-Time Pricing
- Price peaks more/less with sun
22Pricing
- Smart Power Pricing program
- Administered by CNT
- 2.25 per month participation
- Get wholesale price (Ameren providing wires, this
is fair) - Recent legislation allows net metering
- Get the retail price
- Eliminate Smart Power Pricing?
- The Public Utilities Act is amended by adding 5
Section 16-107.5 as follows - Ameren to provide free meter (?)
23Sample Billing (9/24-10/23)
PSP Billing (net energy consumed) Total Energy
861 kWh Total Price 51.37 0.0596/kWh
This is the energy supply charge. Distribution
(the wires) costs 0.0245/kWh Total
0.084/kWh
0.71 at noon, 10/8
24Sample Days
Saving 20 to 40 per month compared to flat rate
25Generated Power
26One Day Example (kW-hr vs. hr)
Peaks nearly line up, maximizing the
benefit Note this is net generation On
negative load generation, effectively get the
retail price
27Economics
- Upfront cost, about 27,000
- 9 per peak watt, installed
- Breakdown in cost per watt
- 4.50 for PV modules
- 1.00 for inverter
- 3.50 for installer labor and markup
- Rebates
- 8,100 for IL (took eight months to receive
check) - 2,000 for Federal
- Net cost 16,900
28Investment Analysis
- At 0.10/kWh 366.90/yr yield
- Simple payback, a mere 46 years!
- This is unfair to PV
- (PV held to near impossible standard)
- Need to look at
- Amortized cost (buying all power upfront)
- Equity
- Increases in electricity prices (real time
price?) - Environmental advantages
29More Econ
- Realtors estimate 1,000 savings 20,000 equity
- 366.90 ? 7,338 in equity, and rising
- Net out-of-pocket 9,562
- Assumes there is a willing buyer
- 4 rise in rates 50 increase in prices in 10
years effects payback and equity
30More Econ
- As part of home mortgage
- 6.75 (30-yr) mortgage, interest is initially
95/month (66.50 after taxes) - 33.58 in energy per month about 33 per month
deficit - Year 15, prices go up, interest is down
- 55/month savings, 49/month interest
- Equity is 13,200, not much less than the 16,900
upfront cost
31Other investments
- A 4 CD would have generated 13,536 in income on
16,900 principle - After taxes, this is 10,000 yield
- 15 years of electric savings lost
- About 500 per year on average
- 6,000 in 15 years of savings lost
- Net yield on the (CD electricity) is 4,000
- This is about an 8,000 deficit
- This is about 44/month average luxury price
for the electricity, or about 0.15/kWh - Gets better with more time
32For Comparison
- Other things that cost 17,000
- BMW 500 over a Toyota Prius
- Extra bedroom
- One semester out-of-state tuition at Illinois
- Etc.
- Conservative?
- Rates may go up faster
- PV costs will go down
- Home interest rates lower
- Unconversative?
- Repairs, maintenance, other risks
33Cost Drivers and Trends
- Manufacturing costs for PV modules going down
- Prices still high due to shortage
- Competition in China coming fast
- Must achieve 3/Wp installed cost and 25 year
warranty to have grid parity
PV Module Costs
Source Evergreen Solar
342007 Solar Decathlon
- Dept. of Energy Sponsored Event
- Large national media attention National Mall
- Draw awareness to solar power
- 20 universities to build solar houses
- 10 events (with overall prizes)
35Contests
- Architecture (200 pts)
- Engineering (150 pts)
- Marketability (150 pts)
- Communications (100 pts)
- Comfort Zone, Getting Around, Hot Water,
Lighting, Appliances (100 pts) - Energy Balance (100 pts)
36Univ. of Illinois Finish
- 9th overall
- 1st in
- Comfort Zone (best passive solar and HVAC design)
- Marketability (very affordable, ordinary building
materials, expandable) - Homes limited to 800 sq. ft.
- Multitude of other limitations and rules
- Accepted for 2009 competition
37Final Illinois House on the Mall
(450k)
Source SD07 photos from solardecathlon.org
38Winning Overall House
39Other Remarkable Houses
- Georgia Tech, Missouri-Rolla
40Other Remarkable Houses, contd
- Santa Clara, Lawrence Tech
41Passive Home Design for 2009
- Passive heating and cooling is largely feasible
in the Midwest - PassivHaus Institute US (PHIUS) is located in
Urbana - Superinsulated homes (1200 sq. ft.)
- No central air conditioning of furnace
- Earth-tube intake
- Southern exposure adequate for PV a 1-kW system
zero net energy
Source e-colab.org
42Summary
- PV taking off but still just off the ground
- normal people now taking notice
- Midwest is a poor economic case
- Environmental improvement is worth?
- Still makes most sense to do conventional
efficiency improvements first - Insulation, sealing
- Compact fluorescent lighting
- Better HVAC (geothermal, etc)