IEA Sides With Utilities On ‘Free-riding’ Rooftop Solar PV

Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!

Originally published on RenewEconomy

The  International Energy Agency is likely to upset the growing global solar PV industry, after questioning the value of residential solar PV, and accusing it of becoming a “free-rider” on networks that could lead to increased costs for other consumers.

In its World Energy Outlook 2013 report released overnight, the IEA says many parties suggest that the dramatic fall in the cost of solar PV in recent years means that it has – or is fast becoming – competitive with electricity generated from fossil fuels.

It says these arguments are based on the concept of “grid parity”. (Actually, it is probably more accurate to say they are based on “socket parity”).

But, the IEA asks, is grid parity the right criterion to measure the full competitiveness  of residential PV, after which it can survive without the need for subsidies? The IEA says no – at least not for those who remain connected to the grid.

The  IEA sides with arguments put forward by utilities, in Australia and elsewhere (and this shouldn’t be surprising given the list of peer reviewers of the document, it’s hard to find a renewable energy representative amongst them) that solar PV effectively allows households with rooftop installation to get a “free ride” on the grid by not making their contribution to grid costs.

From a system perspective, the IEA argues, that the money invested in grids – construction, maintenance etc, needs to be recovered. And it seems to indicate it should. And it says that when allowance is made for these costs, the cost of generation from solar PV systems would have to fall below grid parity to become competitive.

Chip in a few dollars a month to help support independent cleantech coverage that helps to accelerate the cleantech revolution!

It gives the following example illustrated in the graph below.

Household A does not install solar PV, pays $300 per year in fixed charges (assuming all fixed costs are passed through) and another $400 per year for the 4MWh it consumes, to give an average retail price of $175MWh.

Household B installs a solar PV system which produces 1.6MWh for consumption on site, for a total cost of $280 (equal to 1.6MWh $175MWh). It additionally purchases 2.4MWh from the grid at cost of $540 per year (which includes the fixed charges of $300 plus energy consumed). Which, the IEA says to rousing applause from utilities, means that the solar PV household ends up paying more than Household A, despite installing solar and consuming less from the grid.

So, the IEA argues, the cost of the PV system would have to drop to $160 (1.6MWh $100MWh), well below some current notions of grid parity, for it to make economic sense, as is illustrated in Household C. This, says the IEA, is equal to the variable cost that the PV system is displacing.

The IEA further argues that any electricity exported back into the grid should get no more than the prevailing wholesale price otherwise it would “benefit from windfall profits”.

It is harder to imagine a more simplistic approach to the solar PV issue. It takes no account of the potential deferall of grid expenditure, its impact on sidelining fossil fuel generation, and numerous other benefits. The solar industry will be howling in protest, and so should households.

iea-solar

Household A does not install solar PV, pays $300 per year in fixed charges (assuming all fixed costs are passed through) and another $400 per year for the 4MWh it consumes, to give an average retail price of $175MWh.

Household B installs a solar PV system which produces 1.6MWh for consumption on site, for a total cost of $280 (equal to 1.6MWh $175MWh). It additionally purchases 2.4MWh from the grid at cost of $540 per year (which includes the fixed charges of $300 plus energy consumed). Which, the IEA says to rousing applause from utilities, means that the solar PV household ends up paying more than Household A, despite installing solar and consuming less from the grid.

So, the IEA argues, the cost of the PV system would have to drop to $160 (1.6MWh $100MWh), well below some current notions of grid parity, for it to make economic sense, as is illustrated in Household C. This, says the IEA, is equal to the variable cost that the PV system is displacing.

The IEA further argues that any electricity exported back into the grid should get no more than the prevailing wholesale price otherwise it would “benefit from windfall profits”.

Because of this, the IEA says solar households could be benefiting from a “free-rider” effect, and suggests that a better measure would be “cost parity” which includes the value of the grid. It even recommends differentiated tariffs to ensure that costs are recovered.

It is harder to imagine a more simplistic approach to the solar PV issue. It takes no account of the potential deferral of grid expenditure, its impact on sidelining fossil fuel generation, and numerous other benefits, or even of the reality that grid operators have over-capitalised on their networks, and should not be rewarded for their greed.

The solar industry will be howling in protest, and so should households. The irony is that the cost of solar is heading down below $100/MWh anyway. It seems that this is more of a delaying tactic than a solution.


Have a tip for CleanTechnica? Want to advertise? Want to suggest a guest for our CleanTech Talk podcast? Contact us here.

Latest CleanTechnica TV Video


Advertisement
 
CleanTechnica uses affiliate links. See our policy here.

Giles Parkinson

is the founding editor of RenewEconomy.com.au, an Australian-based website that provides news and analysis on cleantech, carbon, and climate issues. Giles is based in Sydney and is watching the (slow, but quickening) transformation of Australia's energy grid with great interest.

Giles Parkinson has 596 posts and counting. See all posts by Giles Parkinson