Last August the US Department of Energy (DoE) held a workshop dedicated to finding a path that will lead to US$1/W installed solar PV by 2017 – at least at the utility-scale. 82 participants from across the solar industry hashed out the pros, cons, and massive challenges. The goal is to launch this program within the first quarter of 2011.
This series of features will be following the progress of the program and also offering opinions of those involved and hopefully, reporting some substantial goals attained by the end of the series.
Basically the program is separating all components of an installed solar PV system on the utility-scale and breaking each down by current cost and giving each a ‘goal cost’. The challenge is how to get to those cost levels.
The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) is a key participant in the US$1/W Initiative and will be working closely with DoE as it unfolds. Dr. Larry Kazmerski, Executive Director of NREL says: “For the visionaries, those who want to stretch goals, this is a welcome program. For the last dozen years, the US solar program has stagnated, while trying to figure out what to do. Now, there is a real group with vision. This program is focused on bringing the total price of operating a completely installed PV system down to US$1/W by 2017. It is highly aggressive. Today all costs totaled, we are looking at US$7-9/W for a home system, sometimes more for business and industrial. So this is an incredible move.
“Dr. Ramamoorthy Ramesh is coming onboard as the Technology Team Leader for this specific DoE program to ensure it gets the attention that the secretary of energy, Dr. Steven Chu wants. This is going to be a big effort to integrate everything to make sure that it will come to fruition in this short time frame.”
Starting at the Utility-Scale
Dr. Michael Woodhouse works within the NREL Strategic Energy Analysis Center and is highly involved with the economic analysis of all solar PV technologies, working with a team at NREL and DoE. “We work together to get a feel for the costs and capabilities of different PV technologies and also with industry to compile information into an aggregate form to look for the best opportunities for cost reductions. This is definitely not, and can’t be, NREL or the DoE working alone or just in tandem with each other as we wouldn’t be the people who will be doing the actual manufacturing and installation of these systems,” Woodhouse says.
“The Dollar-Per-Watt program addresses the utility-level to start, but you can clearly see that the program would certainly affect the commercial and residential level. It addresses getting a PV system cost-module and balance-of-system (BOS) down to a level that translates over to the wholesale cost of power delivery, or looking at a nation-wide average of around US$0.05-0.07/kWh,” Woodhouse says.
“While it’s really a program for overall deployment to get the utility solar cost down to the wholesale utility-rate, tangentially, of course, there is the dollar-per-watt equivalent for residential, which is a competitive basis more around US$0.10/kWh.
“If we are looking at the module, and by no means is it necessarily clear at this point which technology it is going to be, the technology may be applicable to both. One notable exception, however, might be that the dollar-a-watt equivalent for residential might be a building integrated PV (BIPV) product, while the utility case might look more like a rigid module either fixed within a framing system or put on a solar tracking system. Time will tell which products appear to work best for the different markets.”
Translating US$1/W
Basically, a dollar-per-watt at the utility-scale level would translate to a dollar/watt equivalent around US$2/W on the commercial and residential level. Woodhouse notes that what makes the conversion tricky is taking it from the dollars-per-watt system price and then converting that to the levelized cost of energy/electricity (LCOE).
“LCOE looks at a the total costs over the entire lifetime of an installed PV system in dollar terms and then divides it by the amount of energy produced over its lifetime, which is of course, very location dependent. So, after you have divided the total system cost by the total lifetime production of the system, then the units of that are the dollars per kilowatt hour. That is the real goal. Wherever the system is installed, you want that bottom line $/kWh to be the same or lower than the $/kWh from fossil fuel power,” he explains. “Further, the final goal is to have those costs at parity with each other without subsidies.“
An LCOE calculation should do that, taking into the equation all the sunlight and temperature fluctuations for the area where the actual solar system will be installed. That will return the level of electricity cost for the end system. There is a lot of data we have that suggests that many of the solar PV systems and technologies that we have now are very close to fossil fuel prices in certain markets. In particular, there are many deployment scenarios in Hawaii and California that look to be close on the LCOE basis-even if all the incentives and rebates were theoretically taken away.
“But while PV costs will certainly continue to come down, the cost parity is very regionally dependent. The overall goal of this program, to learn how to install systems at a cost that would have a nationwide grid parity for PV 2017, is a very aggressive goal, but we must make this transition and we need to do it as soon as possible.”
Stimulating Innovation
This aggressive program is meant to serve as a stimulant to all solar PV areas: the module and equipment manufacturing, lab-level, electronics, racks, installers and so forth. “Any innovation that any area can come up with to meet the goal is valuable. All agree that it is definitely still an open game as to who, what, or which combination, will win. It might be something nobody thought of yet. There are some research programs set up to address the technology challenges. The program will also have the opportunities for many BOS level innovations too. This has historically been a neglected area, but there is a lot of data to show that the BOS costs right now are actually higher than the module,” Woodhouse says.
He notes that a true balance of system cost estimate is very vague. The process that goes into it may or may not include the financing costs, the margins that people charge, and any other issues that may be project dependent. So the first challenge is to fully define all of the assumptions behind a true BOS cost estimate: While the labor and materials for the system are obviously there, the peripheral things need to be addressed because they can be just as costly as the materials – or more so.
While the DoE Dollar-Per-Watt program is addressing the challenge of lowering the cost of an installed utility-level solar PV system, even there the ongoing LCOE will be very important and must eventually be part of the total system analysis figured into the overall system life use cost.
The Industry Must Change
Kazmerski says that while this is a reach for the US solar PV industry, he believes that the industry is changing. Each in their own area of expertise must meet this, maybe first by obtaining US$4/W then down to US$3-2/W and so forth, because it simply has to be done.
An Added Perspective |
Although the initial DoE program is starting from the utility-level, it will obviously create a trickle-down effect to commercial and residential systems. This is where another stumbling block will need to be met. While getting the nuts and bolts of an installed system down to US$1/W, or approximately US$0.06-0.07/kWh is great, if you have to jump through legal paperwork hoops to get the utility farms up or the systems installed on rooftops – and that adds hundreds of dollars to the cost – what good has a dollar-per-watt achieved? From the installer’s point of view, the dollar-per-watt program is a good first step in bringing solar into mainstream focus. However Matt Ziskin, Sr. Director of Marketing for SunWize Solar notes that while the overall benefits of reducing front end cost to the US$1/W level is highly admirable, to truly bring all solar PV installations to an equal level with fossil fuel, something needs to be done on the cost of installation side. “Installed cost also means all the permits, financing, rebate assignments – everything that goes into an installed system,” Ziskin says. “One of the things I found interesting when I looked at the notes from the meeting they [DoE] had about the dollar-per-watt program in August, was that it focused very much on the equipment costs to get to that goal of a dollar-a-watt. “But one area of high costs that often gets lost in the equation is the cost of things like permitting and all the efforts that go into applying for rebates.” He notes that their installation counterparts in Europe have streamlined this process, while in the USA requirements change from state to state, county to county and even city to city. “A lot of man hours go into those things and you can’t get the cost down when regulations are continually changed, adding more steps the installer has to go through to take the system from a concept drawing to an actual installed system,” Ziskin says. “This is something we’ve been looking at very closely. We’ve been breaking it out in the same way the DoE has broken down their US$1/W approach. What does it cost to do the marketing, the cost of sales, the installation labor, the permitting?” Budgets will of necessity, increase next year because of permitting costs. Most permitting agencies are requiring more in-depth work. In some instances, they will accept drawings and plans, but Ziskin says that more are now requiring to also have a stamped structural done. “We are seeing the permitting process becoming more complicated and expensive in terms of the work we need to do to put the package together. If this keeps up as a trend, I don’t see how we will be able to reduce costs because the requirements are becoming more significant,” he says. For instance, a buyer classification provision will be added to the building code next year that basically says any rooftop mounted PV systems in the USA must have the same fire classification as the roofing material itself. No current solar panels will meet those criteria. Cost could be greatly contained if there were at least a basic permitting venue. Ziskin says that currently the paperwork varies so much it is always a moving target. “In some areas you need to meet all three: state, county and city, and in some cases, they want to see a plan and an engineering drawing for a permit. In other cases they want highly detailed reports on the structural capability of the building stamped by a professional industrial engineer. If this was consistent across the board, even if it did include the highest requirements, it would be easier for all installation companies to address because it would be known and equal from coast to coast. What we have now is almost every city has a different policy or program. You think you are meeting all the requirements and they pop up and say, we added this to it this year.” In addition to the permitting there are also the applications for rebates, tax incentives, and in some cases municipalities, also have their own incentive programs. “We still find the rebates helpful, but with many rebates shrinking while the cost of system installation is dropping, I can see a time where it simply will not benefit anyone to apply for tiny rebates that cost more to process than what the end user gets,” Ziskin adds. “The Dollar-Per-Watt program is a lofty goal and it is something definitely needed. All companies in the solar chain need to work toward the goal to make it work. But, I also think if the people in control could look at the paperwork boondoggle, on top of the actual physical things that go into a PV system, it would help to substantially bring down the real cost of installed PV systems,” Ziskin concludes. |
“Part of this whole initiative is to have a program that helps realign the current industries that are out there, which includes crystalline silicon, thin-films and leading edge things, into technologies that are indeed on a pathway to this US$1/W goal. Research support and policies and everything else needs to be analyzed and adjusted to implement this. But even more than that, to leapfrog some of the new technologies that are still in the lab-development stage,” Kazmerski says.
“I would be skeptical before, but if they are really going to push this and put money into it, some of those nano-technologies will come online a lot quicker. I think it is going to give the research community and the US as a whole a big boost.
“From my perspective, how they are going to do this involves the rest of the world as well. You can’t have a dollar-per-watt program without having all the interactions with the rest of the world on photovoltaics. It will attract more companies to the USA and it will bring in more jobs. Fraunhofer in New Mexico is not only a test center, for instance, it will also have a full R&D lab. We are not in a little bubble sitting here in the USA saying this is the way we have to go. It has to reach all over the world to really work – all solar manufacturers,” Kazmerski says.
“If they see us as a solid market with controls in place and are willing to meet our regulations, then it is a win-win situation. Without a solid plan and true control of the market from the USA top down, it would be chaos.”
Kazmerski says that he sees this program as the goal that all solar PV technologies will need to meet, whether they are on the lab-level or already out there. Only when all meet the full dollar-per-watt installed system level, can a true comparison be done across all actual technologies on a level playing field. Maybe the answer will lie in combining technologies. But regardless of what it is, it has to be cost effective; from the development through end product installation. If solar energy is to be a reality, it needs to fit the lowest pocketbook to become universal.”
Woodhouse adds that this is a program set up to lower the up-front system cost first. It is too early to say that any one technology is the one to go with. “We need to look at all solutions, all technologies and accept that something new, a revolutionary technology might come along – something we are not even thinking about – that may actually do it. It is a completely open question, and one that is still in the very formative stage,” he says.
“The word is getting out. Workshops and meetings are being held with all interested PV industry people to try to figure out exactly what the costs are today and from there, to figure ways of how to bring costs down. We have certainly been coordinating with industry on this. They are critical. Everyone should feel welcome to add their influence and expertise to the program to help meet the goals.”
Dr. Kazmerski concludes by saying that by the end of this decade, the goal is for solar PV to be the most cost effective method for energy production. “Previously the emphasis was: ‘How do we get solar production going in this country?’ Now it’s making the end product cost effective regardless of who is manufacturing it. The market has opened up so much the goal needed to change.”
About:
Based in California, Joyce Laird has been writing for a wide range of industrial magazines for over a decade. Her extensive background in the semiconductor industry created a perfect transition to covering developments in photovoltaics.
Renewable Energy Focus U.S., January/February 2011