NREL Teams with Berkeley Lab to Analyze Solar Pricing Trends and Benchmark "Soft" Costs for PV Systems
Downward pricing for solar projected to continue; soft costs made up 40-50 percent of residential and commercial PV prices in 2010
Tuesday, December 04, 2012
The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE)'s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL) jointly released two reports examining solar photovoltaic (PV) pricing in the U.S.
The first report, Photovoltaic (PV) Pricing Trends: Historical, Recent, and
Near-Term Projections, examines progress in PV price reductions
to help DOE and other PV stakeholders manage the transition to a market-driven
PV industry and to provide clarity surrounding the wide variety of potentially
conflicting data available about PV system prices. By examining progress in PV
price reductions, the report will also help DOE track progress toward the
SunShot goals of reducing the installed cost of solar energy systems by roughly
75 percent between 2010 and 2020. The joint report indicates that PV system
prices in the U.S. have been falling rapidly during the past decade, and are
likely to continue their downward trend through 2012 and into 2013.
"There is often confusion when interpreting estimates of PV system prices,"
NREL Solar Technology Financial Analyst David Feldman said. "This report helps
to clarify this confusion by bringing together data from a number of different
sources and clearly distinguishing among past, current and near-term projected
estimates."
The report indicates that while data sources, assumptions, and methods
differ substantially between the bottom-up analysis and the reported price
analysis, the results support the validity of both analyses and provide a
consistent perspective on system pricing.
The report draws on several ongoing NREL research activities, including
detailed component level benchmarking of recent PV system prices, based on
NREL's detailed bottom-up engineering model of PV system costs, and NREL's
ongoing tracking of near-term projections of system- and component-level pricing
from various analysts and manufacturers. The report also summarizes findings on
historical price trends from LBL's Tracking the Sun
V report.
The second report, Benchmarking Non-Hardware Balance of System (Soft) Costs for
U.S. Photovoltaic Systems Using a Data-Driven Analysis from PV Installer Survey
Results, presents results from the first DOE- sponsored data
collection and analysis of non-hardware balance-of-system costs -- often
referred to as "business process" or "soft" costs. The report concludes that in
2010, while total soft costs constituted roughly 40-50 percent of a typical PV
system's price, the four categories of soft cost benchmarked in the report
accounted for 23 percent of residential PV system prices, 17 percent of small
commercial system prices, and 5 percent of large commercial system prices. The
four categories studied were customer acquisition; permitting, inspection, and
interconnection; installation labor; and labor associated with arranging
third-party financing.
"These soft costs present significant opportunities for further cost
reductions and labor-productivity gains," NREL Solar Technology Markets and
Policy Analyst Kristen Ardani said. "Benchmarking and tracking these costs will
help with the development of policies and practices aimed at reducing cost
inefficiencies."
Both reports were produced as part of an ongoing collaborative research
effort between the two labs focused on solar technology soft cost and
system-level cost analysis and modeling. This research is supported by funding
from the DOE's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory addresses the world's most
urgent scientific challenges by advancing sustainable energy, protecting
human health, creating new materials, and revealing the origin and fate of
the universe. The University of California manages Berkeley Lab for the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office of Science. For more, visit http://www.lbl.gov.
NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's
primary national laboratory for renewable energy and energy efficiency research
and development. NREL is operated for DOE by The Alliance for Sustainable
Energy, LLC.
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