Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Power United States

In a Milestone, the US Exceeds 5 Million Solar Installations (electrek.co) 159

According to the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), the U.S. has officially surpassed 5 million solar installations. "The 5 million milestone comes just eight years after the U.S. achieved its first million in 2016 -- a stark contrast to the four decades it took to reach that initial milestone since the first grid-connected solar project in 1973," reports Electrek. From the report: Since the beginning of 2020, more than half of all U.S. solar installations have come online, and over 25% have been activated since the Inflation Reduction Act became law 20 months ago. Solar arrays have been installed on homes and businesses and as utility-scale solar farms. The U.S. solar market was valued at $51 billion in 2023. Even with changes in state policies, market trends indicate robust growth in solar installations across the U.S. According to SEIA forecasts, the number of solar installations is expected to double to 10 million by 2030 and triple to 15 million by 2034.

The residential sector represents 97% of all U.S. solar installations. This sector has consistently set new records for annual installations over the past several years, achieving new highs for five straight years and in 10 out of the last 12 years. The significant growth in residential solar can be attributed to its proven value as an investment for homeowners who wish to manage their energy costs more effectively. California is the frontrunner with 2 million solar installations, though recent state policies have significantly damaged its rooftop solar market. Meanwhile, other states are experiencing rapid growth. For example, Illinois, which had only 2,500 solar installations in 2017, now boasts over 87,000. Similarly, Florida has seen its solar installations surge from 22,000 in 2017 to 235,000 today. By 2030, 22 states or territories are anticipated to surpass 100,000 solar installations. The U.S. has enough solar installed to cover every residential rooftop in the Four Corners states of Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

In a Milestone, the US Exceeds 5 Million Solar Installations

Comments Filter:
  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Thursday May 16, 2024 @08:48PM (#64478141) Homepage Journal

    The marketing page linked to in the write-up talks a lot about the number of installations, while leaving their combined output away. One needs to consult government's (gasp!) web-site [eia.gov] to find out, that the spectacular success we're celebrating is 3.9% of the total electricity consumption of the country...

    • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @09:12PM (#64478177)

      ... the spectacular success we're celebrating is 3.9% of the total electricity consumption of the country...

      That's a fair point. But keep in mind that this kind of growth tends to fall on an exponential curve, so it's still good news. And as the market grows, so does the incentive for innovation that will increase yields, efficiencies, and - hopefully - useful lifetimes.

      I see the two-steps-ahead strategic business opportunity here as maintaining, refurbishing, de-commissioning, and recycling solar infrastructure. There are going to be a lot of clapped-out panels, batteries, and inverters that need to have all the useful parts and materials re-used or recycled, while the remainder is disposed of safely.

      Also, look for past-its-prime equipment to be sold off to poorer countries and/or down-market segments. I think there will be a worthwhile market for equipment with degraded efficiencies and shorter remaining useful life, because it will have a drastically lower price. This kind of equipment will be especially attractive in areas where there's lots of sunlight and/or lots of space available.

    • by Temkin ( 112574 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @09:54PM (#64478209)

      the spectacular success we're celebrating is 3.9% of the total electricity

      So... Most of us understand the Sun only shines during the day... With than in mind...

      California peaked out at ~71% solar powered mid-day today. They literally curtail everything, even large Hydro, excepting only nukes for technical reasons, to accommodate their solar output. Spot prices routinely go negative. Today at one point CALISO was offering 35 cents to take a kWh. Not just free, actually paid 35 cents to use/consume/store.

      Here in hydrocarbon heaven, with more proven reserves than Saudi Arabia.... Texas hit 14.8% solar grid load. And this was a bad day with lots of thunderstorms & cloud cover. A good day will see 35%+... And wind can hit 70%+ this time of year...

      • by mi ( 197448 )

        California peaked out at ~71% solar powered mid-day today .. Texas hit 14.8% solar grid load

        How much of that came from large utilities vs. residential roof-top installations?

        Because the utilities aren't many — hardly a few scores nation-wide — yet, we're invited to celebrate "5 million installations"...

        • by Temkin ( 112574 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @10:32PM (#64478275)

          How much of that came from large utilities vs. residential roof-top installations?

          Because the utilities aren't many â" hardly a few scores nation-wide â" yet, we're invited to celebrate "5 million installations"...

          And that's actually kind of my point... How many rooftop solar installs in Berkeley, California are getting paid to run Chevron's refinery next door in Richmond?

          Where's the transparency on how the large commercial contracts are being written? My parents paid $20k to have solar, so they could run their A/C during the day in their 80's and be comfortable in their old age. Or did they pay that so Chevron could have free electricity to run their refinery when the sun is up?

          • Your parents paid $20K for solar because it (hopefully) worked out for them financially and/or logistically in whatever considerations they made.

            Not much reason to get upset if a choice you make that benefits you also happens to benefit someone you don't like. Especially in this case, since electricity is fungible and that Chevron plant is gonna use that power regardless of where it comes from, and the "free" electricity benefits the entire grid and not just your parents and that plant.
            =Smidge=

          • by necro81 ( 917438 )

            My parents paid $20k to have solar, so they could run their A/C during the day in their 80's and be comfortable in their old age. Or did they pay that so Chevron could have free electricity to run their refinery when the sun is up?

            Electrical power, like money, is pretty fungible. It enters the grid in lots of places, and gets consumed in many more places. By and large, the grid is still an instantaneous balance between supply and demand: all the electricity need for a given moment must be balanced by ge

            • by Temkin ( 112574 )

              I understand how the grid works. Been dabbling with solar panels since the 80's... And I used to work on large environmental projects in California.

              And I'm sure Chevron isn't getting theirs for free.

              There's the problem... There's a lack of transparency. You can claim they aren't, but I've not seen any proof. Accountability is not one of California's strengths. My worry is they're transferring wealth from the poor & middle class to large corporations while skimming off the top and juicing the greens to keep the ball rolling. California actually has

              • > You can claim they aren't, but I've not seen any proof.

                You also haven't seen any proof that they do. In fact it sounds like you have no reason to even suspect that's happening outside of general paranoia. What is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence, etc...

                If you export to the grid as a residential customer, you SHOULD be getting compensation of some kind, usually in the form of net metering, so it's not "free." You're getting paid in credit towards future electricity usage.

                But a

                • by Temkin ( 112574 )

                  What is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence, etc...

                  Ok... How about:
                  https://www.cpuc.ca.gov/indust... [ca.gov]

                  One interpretation of this is the proles have noticed all the middle class & rich homeowners without electric bills thanks to their taxpayer subsidized solar panels... Can't have the unwashed masses questioning their electric bills running 3x the national average. This is not paranoia. They are actively trying to figure out how to charge rates based on the income of the homeowner or renter.

                  That they're trying to adjust the system now, after all those p

                  • by sarren1901 ( 5415506 ) on Friday May 17, 2024 @11:17AM (#64479277)

                    No worries, we've got an upcoming "connection fee" that's getting implemented next year. It helps anyone that uses a ton of grid energy and punishes anyone that is either solar or low energy use. I did the math and the break even point is about 350 KwHs. Anyone using less will see a bill increase and anyone using more will see a decrease.

                    I'm not very happy about it since I live in a small apartment alone and never use my AC or heater, so my usage averages around 150 KwH a month. The folks with a house, heated pool and pair of EVs will see a nice decrease.

                    Solar users will be hurt if they have a system that covers all their needs, which I imagine is the typical home solar user. I know my condo had a pinch more solar then I needed per day and I literally got paid $350 after that first year of solar ownership. SDGE was probably furious over that. Paying me to be on the grid. With a $24 connection fee, that's pretty much gone or drastically reduced. It's worse for people on the net netmetering 3.0 rules as well. They get paid a lot less per KwH then netmetering 2.0.

                    Thanks California! Way to encourage green energy. Thing is, they only like green energy if it makes their utility buddies rich. Fuck the taxpayer!

                  • > Ok... How about:

                    Sorry not seeing the "Therefore Chevron is getting free electricity" connection here. I mean it's literally only applicable to residential so I dunno what the relevance even is here.

                    I don't even know how you reach your "interpretation" - this only addresses energy affordability and doesn't factor in solar panels? In other words, if you have solar panels, it does not change your affordability ratio.

                    This is just a way to characterize housing affordability across the state, because they ne

                • With our new netmetering rules as of April 2023, the breakeven point for solar is now nearly 15 years. It's atrocious but all the consumer solar was costing the utilities way to much money so we had to do something. That something was watering down the credit to a really low level. They are making it worse next year by adding a fixed cost, grid connection fee for everyone. This really hurts solar users the most but also hurts anyone that uses low levels of electricity. I'm not very happy about it since my b

              • by necro81 ( 917438 )

                And I'm sure Chevron isn't getting theirs for free.

                There's the problem... There's a lack of transparency. You can claim they aren't, but I've not seen any proof.

                I guess basic economics suffices for me. Under what circumstances would the local utility let an enormous customer like Chevron get its electricity for free?

        • That's great. The more people can generate their own power (and get a battery) the less you have to rely on a massive grid
      • I think sequestration is a mistake... if you can't use the power elsewhere.

        In a situation where you just can't to the point you're paying people to consume so your base load nuke plants can operate, THAT is power that should be used for sequestration projects instead.

        • by Temkin ( 112574 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @10:50PM (#64478289)

          I think sequestration is a mistake... if you can't use the power elsewhere.

          In a situation where you just can't to the point you're paying people to consume so your base load nuke plants can operate, THAT is power that should be used for sequestration projects instead.

          CALISO is way past that... They don't have anywhere to dump the power mid-day. They push as much of it as they can out of state, and store what they can in batteries, etc... The result... At night, 20%+ of California's electricity is imported hydro from out of state. See for yourself...

          https://www.gridstatus.io/live... [gridstatus.io]

          • by shilly ( 142940 )

            Surely it is in their commercial interest to scale up storage pretty dramatically from where it is today?

            • Scale up storage of power that is produced midday for free today, with the world expanding solar in a doubling every 3 years? The utilities make a margin from selling power and claiming their grid is crashing under loads that have not significantly increased over the past 20 years. Like collecting rain in the rainforest, you know it is going to rain tomorrow at the same time, investing in a large cistern to store a years worth of drinking water is bad idea. Making the drinkers thinking the rain
              • > The utilities make a margin from selling power and claiming their grid is crashing under loads that have not significantly increased over the past 20 years.

                Okay, so there's a bit to unpack here.

                What are "The utilities" in this sentence? In virtually all of the US, you have power producers and grid operators. They are separate entities.

                Power producers are the ones who make money selling power.

                The grid operators build and maintain the distribution network between power producers and consumers. They charg

                • Deploying reason against a paranoid rant against 'the man'. It'll be interesting to see how that goes.

              • by shilly ( 142940 )

                But the utilities need to operate 24/7, albeit with lower loads overnight, and the costs of spinning reserves etc are real. The more storage they have, the lower their opex. And if they want to sell as much power as possible, then encouraging a shift to electrify everything (esp. transport, heating/cooling, cooking) is a great way to stoke demand -- there is much more scope for growth there than playing silly buggers with grid overloads.

    • Most people won't care about the total generated, they will see that more and more people are getting solar and that will encourage them to think about doing the same
      • No worries, the utility commissioners are way ahead of you. They are busy making new netmetering rules that pay really poorly for sending KwHs to them and also implementing grid connection fees. They've essentially taken out any real incentive to get solar without a battery. Worse, even if you have a battery, it's illegal in most places to disconnect from the grid. At least in California. I'm not saying it's 100% state wide, but in MANY cities, it's illegal. In the cities it is legal, there is a very long l

    • Who cares about silly technical capacity mumbo-jumbo? We want to know how many football fields or how many times to the moon and back that is.
    • by CEC-P ( 10248912 )
      They also don't mention how many are door to door salesmen scams where they price gouge and never do a roof inspection first and don't have an "out" on financing if you move, not to mention that they're doing it in the northern-most states where there's so little sunlight that it's a waste of resources.
  • by bbos ( 1048782 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @08:48PM (#64478143)
    In Australia we have 1/10th the population but 3.5million solar installs covering 1/3 of houses. https://solarcalculator.com.au... [solarcalculator.com.au]
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by mi ( 197448 )

      In Australia we have 1/10th the population but 3.5million solar installs

      For one, over 70% of Americans live in "snowy regions, which receive more than five inches (or 13 cm) average snowfall annually" [dot.gov]. In Australia, I believe, only the Tasmanians live in similar conditions.

      That explains a large part of the discrepancy. The rest may be explained by Americans' greater reluctance to accept, whatever the government is pushing [pewresearch.org] — and, perhaps, greater concerns over dependence on China [theatlantic.com], .where much of the st [ucsusa.org]

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        So what? Snow doesn't destroy solar panels. It just means that the payback time will be a little longer, before it's all free energy.

        Another option is to mount the panels vertically so that snow doesn't settle on them. Works well in winter when the sun is low in the sky. The panels are so cheap now they still have decent payback times in that orientation.

        • You realize panels lose efficiency every year, correct? Roughly 1%-1.5% a year in fact. So in 15 years, you'll have lost 15%-22.5% efficiency.

          Most solar installations rely on favorable sell-back rates and utilities are working hard to curtail that sell-back rate due to the fact that there is now an abundance of solar.

          When rates go negative, the utility still has to take your energy, and they hate that. Essentially, if you are going solar you better get a battery with it.

          I love the idea of consumer solar. I

    • Everywhere has less solar than Australia - you're #1

      (Per capita)

      https://reneweconomy.com.au/au... [reneweconomy.com.au]

    • Well the vast majority of America is not barren useless desert?

      Solar efficiency increases with sun angle, and Australia lies between 10-40 degrees latitude, the U.S.is between 25 and 50.

    • by necro81 ( 917438 )
      In the particular case of Australia, solar deployment is a lot cheaper and simpler than the US - something like 1/2 or 1/3 the cost/kW. There are a couple reasons (discussed here and [youtu.be] here [youtube.com]). It boils down to 1) Ozzie's closer to China (geographically and economically), where most solar panels are made, and 2) the permitting process to install and connect solar is dead simple and fast.
  • by khchung ( 462899 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @08:55PM (#64478159) Journal

    Give it to American news to use meaningless metrics like "installations". A palm sized panel on the top of a mailbox is also an "installation", gee, 5M installations, what a great achievement!

    A quick search showed that US added 32.4GW solar capacity in 2023. Is gigawatts too difficult for Americans to understand?
    https://www.seia.org/news/sola... [seia.org]

    But of course, if the GW numbers were reported, then anyone can do another quick search and found that 32.4 GW is a pittance compared to what the rest of the world did: "Global annual renewable capacity additions increased by almost 50% to nearly 510 gigawatts (GW) in 2023"
    I.e. US installation only accounted for a pitiful 6.4% of the world's installation.
    https://www.iea.org/reports/re... [iea.org]

    Well, at least it is greater than zero, that counted for something, I suppose.

    • by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @09:42PM (#64478195)

      A quick search showed that US added 32.4GW solar capacity in 2023. Is gigawatts too difficult for Americans to understand?

      I'd like to know how that translates into energy produced. Capacity factor is a thing, and very important in evaluating how a given power generator contributes to the total electrical grid.

      What was noted in the fine article was that rooftop solar won't save you from an outage of utility power, you will need a battery for that. I'd say the battery is far more important than the solar panels because, at least around here, outages tend to happen at night. So long as the battery keeps the refrigerator and furnace running until the power comes back, which often happens before dawn, the solar panels added nothing to being prepared for an electrical outage. I guess in places like California, where they like to cut power at nearly random times of day, having rooftop solar with the batteries might be helpful. But that gets back to "installations" versus some more useful metric like watts or watt-hours. I discovered in a power outage that I can keep my my home relatively comfortable with my 2000 watt generator, not that I'd like to live that way indefinitely but with that much power I'm at least safe for a while. Part of my energy demands are filled by natural gas, such as heating of my home and water, so perhaps not a fair metric by some accounts.

      Knowing watts or watt-hours of solar power being produced might not be a sufficient metric of success either. If people moving to install solar panels on their roof turn to cooking and/or heating by fossil fuels because of an insufficient supply of electricity then that could be considered going backwards in lowering CO2 emissions, lowering air pollution, gaining independence from imported energy, or any of a number of goals that renewable energy is supposed to bring us.

      • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        MacMann, nobody is going to install a nuclear reactor on their roof.

        Which is why nobody really cares about capacity factor for rooftop solar. As long as it pays for itself reasonably quickly, it's a great use of otherwise unused space.

        • Wait! I can have a nuclear reactor on my roof? Where do I sign up? Is there a tax writeoff?
    • by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Friday May 17, 2024 @12:43AM (#64478385)

      anyone can do another quick search and found that 32.4 GW is a pittance compared to what the rest of the world did: "Global annual renewable capacity additions increased by almost 50% to nearly 510 gigawatts (GW) in 2023"
      I.e. US installation only accounted for a pitiful 6.4% of the world's installation.

      You seem to have glossed over the fact that 510 GW represents all renewables, whereas 32.4 GW is just for solar, so you either...
      1) Failed to include the US' other renewable additions (i.e. 32.4 GW is too low) while trying to compare total renewable additions in 2023, or else...
      2) Failed to exclude the world's other renewable additions (i.e. 510 GW is too high; the IEA report suggests 374.9 GW is the solar number for 2023) when attempting to compare total solar additions in 2023

      Either way, your math is wrong and incorrectly disfavors the US.

      I also get the sense that you aren't keeping things in perspective by considering the context in which those percentages exist. Going back to the actual numbers, for instance, the EU added 56 GW of solar in 2023 [solarpowereurope.org]. I'd call that a respectable addition, yet it only accounts for 14.9% of new solar capacity in 2023 (56/374.9). Combine that with the US' 8.6% (32.4/374.9) and you still only get 23.6%. Why not more? Because both the EU and US are dwarfed by China, which "commissioned as much solar PV as the entire world did in 2022" according to the IEA report you linked.

      The fact that China is doing so well is great, but it doesn't diminish the respectable gains being made elsewhere, including in the US. Your use of numbers fails to provide the necessary context to recognize and appreciate that.

    • by shilly ( 142940 )

      I don't think it's quite as meaningless as you suggest. It's not an indication of capacity added, it's an indication of where the US stands on the adoption curve. Sure, there will be some large farms and some weird tiny installs in there, but the bulk of that 5m is going to be residential and small business deployments. By comparison, there's about 2.5m EVs on US roads, but that includes PHEVs. So solar is further along the adoption curve, which I hadn't really expected.

    • Take it easy on us Americans. As you can see from the headlines, we're still using milestones instead of kilometerstones. Or whatever material kilometer markers are made of.
    • So roughly 3.9% of the world's population installed roughly 6.4% of the world's new PV in 2023? Yeah, what jerks.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @09:26PM (#64478187)
    And throw a big coronal mass ejection our way.
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      If a coronal mass ejection takes out solar installations, the loss of those will be meaningless compared to the rest of the damage, think a Crispy Creme doughnut left in the fryer on high overnight.

  • by Taelron ( 1046946 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @10:01PM (#64478219)
    We put solar on our home a couple of years ago while the state of California was still operating under NEM 2.0. We do ok offsetting our winter gas and electrical usage with the extra power we generate in the summer. But the changes to NEM 3 has made it take longer or more difficult for new installations to reach break even points. And now California PUC just approved tacking on an additional monthly flat fee to everyones electric bill. This means besides the upfront costs to solar, we are still being saddled with higher electric bills even if we arent using any power from the grid. Solar installations in the State are slowing and some companies are shrinking or outright closing down.
    • Yep, Fascism is alive and well in California. Mass murder machine PG&E is calling the shots here, not The People. Time for yet another version of California Uber Alles, whee.

  • TCO (Score:5, Informative)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @10:03PM (#64478225)

    >"its proven value as an investment for homeowners who wish to manage their energy costs more effectively"

    That wasn't my conclusion when I analyzed it a few years ago. At least not the proposals I saw, which had the panels finally paying for themselves many, many years later, at a point they would be worn out and/or likely damaged or ruined by needing reroofing. At most, I would have likely expected a break-even at a time they would then need to be replaced. At worst, I could have lost my shirt. Are people also calculating the opportunity cost of that tied-up money that could have been compounding interest all those years? The cost of removing them when time to re-roof? The service costs when something breaks? (I did). Looked to me like the only ones coming out ahead would be the solar sellers/installers while their customers could bask in their self-virtue gamble.

    Yes, could have been where I am located, or the electricity pricing here, or the exact panels proposed, or my calculations or assumptions. Who knows, I did the best I could. But it sure seemed like a mediocre course of action to take. I expected at the time that the economics of it would get significantly better. Maybe they have, but I don't think this quickly, it hasn't been that long.

    If I had the money to possibly burn, and was in my last/"forever home", it would be far more attractive.... but only when coupled with energy storage (far more $), and mostly as just a hedge against disaster; creating my own energy-independence (along with a well and septic field). Alas, that dream has been fading.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      There is nowhere on Earth where solar panels would not pay for themselves before they would be worn out.

      Typically they come with a 25 year warranty, but are likely to last well, well beyond that.

      For somewhere in northern Europe you are looking at maybe 5 years for payback, after which it's all free energy, money off your bill. The further south you get, the sooner you start to profit. That makes them a great investment because the return is both large and guaranteed (literally, by the warranty on the panels

      • For somewhere in northern Europe you are looking at maybe 5 years for payback, after which it's all free energy, money off your bill. The further south you get, the sooner you start to profit. That makes them a great investment because the return is both large and guaranteed (literally, by the warranty on the panels).

        I guess that is true if you include significant subsidies to cover the upfront cost. However, in Northern Europe, the amount of subsidies often depends on income. Therefore, most wealthy individuals receive little to no government assistance for installing rooftop panels nowadays, which makes the payback time around 20 years. This assumes that you can still sell excess electricity to the grid and be compensated for it, even if there is no demand. However, this situation is changing, as utilities are realizi

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          This is a good tool for calculating your payback time: https://re.jrc.ec.europa.eu/pv... [europa.eu]

          To pick a random example, say you had a modest 5kW system, typical cost installed around £6,000. Let's use Birmingham as an example, since that's right in the middle of England. The majority of the population lives south of there, but it's reasonable.

          According to that site, average expected generation over a year would be 4721.22kWh. Average electricity price in the UK is £0.24-0.25, so you would

        • Idiot very much?

          You could read up the laws ... then you would know how it works.

          This assumes that you can still sell excess electricity to the grid and be compensated for it, even if there is no demand. However, this situation is changing, as utilities are realizing it makes no sense to buy electricity from you if they then have to pay people to consume it because of oversupply.

          Utilities gave no say in that matter. The law defines who has to pay what in what circumstances.''

          in Northern Europe, the amount of

      • by necro81 ( 917438 )

        There is nowhere on Earth where solar panels would not pay for themselves before they would be worn out.

        I live in Svalbard with a north-facing roof, you insensitive clod!

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Interesting that this was modded troll, when it's factually correct. There is literally nowhere on Earth, unless you happen to may live right next to a huge cliff or something, where solar will take more than the warranty period of any half decent panels to pay back.

        Does this knowledge really upset people so much?

        • Yeah, it does. It is clear from the comments that many on here are anti-renewable energy and are just searching for arguments against it. Sort of like how Chimp's fling their poo at people sometimes.

          My experience was entirely negative, so much so that I have not purchased solar for my house... The three solar companies that came to my door had such inflated prices that it would take 20 years or more (their calculation) to pay it back. But I realize that these are predatory companies and don't list my expe

    • That wasn't my conclusion when I analyzed it a few years ago. At least not the proposals I saw, which had the panels finally paying for themselves many, many years later, at a point they would be worn out and/or likely damaged or ruined by needing reroofing.

      I guess the take away is to check the numbers yourself. I live in NJ and my panels payed for themselves in under four years. Not an ideal climate, but I was significantly helped by NJ allowing the sale of solar green energy credits. Without the sol

  • Hmmmm.... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Thursday May 16, 2024 @10:08PM (#64478235)

    The residential sector represents 97% of all U.S. solar installations.

    So, a bit like the backyard pig iron production in Mao's China.

    • Except, you know, without the pollution. And solar panels don't require the people whose residences these are located on to tend to them, so it's not going to lead to massive famine.
  • Seems rather low, but Australia's 3.7million and counting installations only produces 34.2 gigawatts total, but pretty good for a country with 26 million people.
  • Try harder (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Fons_de_spons ( 1311177 ) on Friday May 17, 2024 @12:56AM (#64478401)
    Only 5 million for the US? Belgium here, solar panels everywhere. Not much sun though. Come on US, be great again.
    • MAGA did not work last time.
      But kudos that you try!!!

      The US of awesomeness.
      A third world country with a first world navy.

      And a voting system that is not even marginally better than China's ...

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by wyHunter ( 4241347 )
        Try visiting the US before you do your screeds. I agree about the voting - I'd like to see nothing other than 'go to the polls and have ID'
        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by cayenne8 ( 626475 )

          I'd like to see nothing other than 'go to the polls and have ID'

          I would too...but for some reason in the US, there are enough voices out there shouting that "ID's for voting are racist"....and they try to block what should be a common sense thing.

  • It's pretty frustrating to me that on one hand, America has government leadership constantly hawking the need for "cleaner, greener energy" and handing out tax credits for putting in solar. But on the other hand? We have a policy of blocking the import of solar panels from China. We're stuck paying far more per panel, while the rest of the world develops its solar power at much more attractive prices using the Chinese panels.

    I had solar installed at my old house, roughly 10 years ago. Went with Canadian-mad

  • Considering that many states have a PUC (public utility commission) that are actively doing their best to discourage consumer solar, it will be interesting to see the stats on consumer solar versus solar farms. I'm going to guess that we see a major drop off on the consumer side while the industry solar farms continue to grow. This drop off has already happened in California with numerous solar companies going out of business because of lack of demand when they changed netmetering rules last April.

    Next year

  • I'm shocked! I put a 6 KwH array on my house like fifteen years ago. I generate most of my electricity form it here in Southern California and my electricity bill went from $300 per month to less than $50. I thought everyone did solar.

news: gotcha

Working...