Bay Area Solar Installations: Intro - 2007 | Bay Area Solar Installation Report Introduction - 2007 |
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Preface
The following Bay Area Solar Installation's Report is another educational effort put forth by the Northern California Solar Energy Association (NorCal Solar) towards its mission: To foster the development and application of solar energy technology through the exchange of information.
Forward
In 2006, California reaffirmed its commitment to solar energy by authorizing the funding a 10-year program to provide incentives to residents and businesses that install solar technologies. The statewide effort is known as the Go Solar California campaign -- and it includes solar programs at our large investor-owned utilities as well as the many small municipal utility districts. IntroductionIn 2007, the California Rebate program received applications for 208.6 megawatts (MW) of solar power, a record for the California solar industry. If this trend continues, the California Public Utilities Commission predicts that there will be a 35-40% rate of growth statewide in California during 2008. This will translate directly into a significantly higher total number of megawatts installed.This report by the Northern California Solar Energy Association (NorCal Solar) uses publicly available solar incentive data to describe the number and amount of grid-tied solar photovoltaic (PV) installations as of 12/31/2007 in ten Bay Area counties and 165 communities. NorCal Solar plans to update this data annually. On the Bay Area Solar Installation pages for 1998-2007 and for 2007 only , we have provided the raw data used for the reports, pivot tables totaling the relevant data and sortable lists for both cities and counties. Readers can use these resources to sort and search for specific regional data. Data Analysis and RationaleCalifornians have purchased more than $2.1 billion in solar electric technology (PV), representing 30,466 PV systems and 244 megawatts (MW) of solar power from 1998 - 2007. In the 10 counties of the Bay Area, $746 million worth of solar systems have been installed representing 11,563 PV systems and 84 megawatts (MW) of solar power. [1] In 2007, California added 70 megawatts of solar, with 24 megawatts coming from the Bay Area. California has offered financial incentives for grid-tied solar electric systems (PV) since 1998, and in January 2007 the state implemented a new incentive program called the California Solar Initiative (CSI). The CSI is a ten-year $3.2 billion incentive program with the goal of installing 3,000 MW of solar power on the equivalent of one million rooftops. The CSI has been a much heralded program due to its size, length, and cutting-edge policy goal of establishing a sustainable solar industry. NorCal Solar focused on ten Bay Area counties because this region leads the growing wave of solar adoption across the state. Apparent reasons for strong solar adoption in the Bay Area include solar-friendly utility rates, net metering, ample sun exposure, supportive local governments, a strong environmental ethic, and the attention brought to PV technology through the Vote Solar initiative in 2000. New this year is a category titled Installations/Capita. This is intended to recognize cities and counties with a high proportion of residential installations. Also new this year is an analysis for calendar year 2007 only in addition to a cumulative report. We felt it was important to recognize cities and counties that are recently most active in solar installations. And finally, we redefined the city size categories for the per capita analysis according to the population ranges outlined by the California League of Cities.
NorCal Solar limited the records used to those indicating installed systems and paid rebates as of the end of 2007. This way we ensure a comparable annual analysis for the duration of this project, including maintaining the integrity of the data’s comparability between the old and new rebate programs. Also, please note that due to changes in the data analysis for this year’s report, it is not possible to compare the results to the 2007 Bay Area Solar Installations Report.
The raw data for this report includes Emerging Renewables Program (ERP) incentive records from the California Energy Commission (CEC), data from PG&E for the Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP) and California Solar Initiative (CSI), records from Silicon Valley Power (SVP) which serves the City of Santa Clara, and the City of Palo Alto Utilities (CPAU). One of the key features of the California incentive programs is that they seek to stimulate increased economies of scale and resulting reductions in the price of PV installations over time. That is why the incentives are designed to ratchet down over time on a dollar/watt basis. With this report, we start tracking the average total installed cost so that readers may evaluate the extent to which installed costs actually drop over time. The values for 2007 are shown below: Average Cost/Watt for 2007:
< 10 kW - $9.87 It is often said that “what gets measured gets done” and so we seek to shine a spotlight on “what is getting done” in Northern California solar installations. To this end, in this report and subsequent editions we seek to raise awareness of the success communities are having deploying solar PV technologies based on several different metrics. It is our hope that translating program data into a simplified score card makes it fun and interesting to track the progress of the PV installations and to engender a sense of inter-community competition and community engagement in this important market transformation toward solar energy resources. We are thrilled by the progress many communities, small and large, affluent and less so, and urban and rural, are making with adoption of solar energy. We hope you find the Bay Area Solar Installations report useful for assessing the progress of PV in California. EndnotesHistoryThe Bay Area Solar Installations and City Solar Awards was an idea brought to NorCal Solar by volunteer member Bill LaCommare. Under the supervision of NorCal Solar, Mr. LaCommare completed the first analysis in July 2006 for solar installations under 15 kW in 7 Bay Area counties. The 2nd report was expanded and completed in July 2007 for solar installations of all sizes in 10 Bay Area counties through December 2006. The 3rd report was completed in July 2008 and included cumulative analysis for "1998 - 2007" and single year analysis for "2007". CreditsThank you to those who have made this report possible. Data:
• Assistance and Support with Data Acquisition: PG&E Report:
• Report: Abigail Baxley, Bill LaCommare, Claudia Wentworth, Bryan Steele, Elaine Hebert, Ted Pope and Bruce Lymburn About NorCal Solar
Since 1975 the Northern California Solar Energy Association has
inspired tens of thousands of people to support and adopt solar energy
technology. We are membership driven, independent, public-benefit,
501(c)(3) non-profit organization spanning over 41 counties. Our
mission is to foster the development and application of solar energy
technology through the exchange of information and the generation of
support for our industry. We are extremely lucky to have an active
core of volunteers who contribute countless hours to promote solar
education. Disclaimer:All attempts were made to present the actual incentive data within the specified parameters. Please report any missing incentive data to This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .
ERP included 27,334 systems and totaled 120 MW - Data Source [2] Brainy Zip used for zipcodes. Population from city website or Census data from 2000 & 2006 [3 ] Note: the protocol for records that included city names with incorrect or incomplete zip codes was to maintain the city name and delete the zip code. Approximately 3-5% of the original records included zip code errors.
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