Completely ignoring what the relative value per kWh is of electricity
produced on the same site as load, vs eletricity produced remotely and that
is required to be transported and distributed out to the loads.  I don't
argue that a large solar farm is cheaper per kWh produced, but by the time
you take into account the benefits of generation at point of load, I'm not
so sure that it's still better.

Zeke

On Sat, Jul 18, 2015 at 9:42 AM, Darryl McMahon <dar...@econogics.com>
wrote:

>
> http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/news/2015/07/first-solar-utilities-say-big-solar-farms-cheaper-than-rooftops.html
>
> [But who ends up owning the production resource and revenue?  Citizens or
> corporations?  Opportunity for co-ops?  Local example:  Ottawa Renewable
> Energy Co-op - http://www.ottawarenewableenergycoop.com/
>
> It is not clear if the analysis allows for costs associated with stringing
> and maintaining transmission and distribution wiring required for a remote,
> large solar array vs. one mounted on a site where the electricity would be
> used.]
>
> First Solar, Utilities Say Big Solar Farms Cheaper Than Rooftops
>
> July 15, 2015
>
> By Christopher Martin, Bloomberg
>
> Building vast fields of solar panels for utilities is cheaper than bolting
> lots of little ones to rooftops, and now First Solar Inc. has more data to
> prove it.
>
> The largest U.S. developer of utility-scale solar farms joined a utility
> industry group to fund a study that found rooftop solar systems can be more
> than double the cost of large ground-mounted power plants.
>
> The Brattle Group study is the latest salvo in an escalating battle
> between utilities and rooftop developers including SolarCity Corp. and
> Sunrun Inc. that install solar panels on homes and offices, eating into
> revenue for the regulated monopolies.
>
> “Members of the utility trade group worry rooftop solar is cannibalizing
> their growth,” Kit Konolige, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, said in
> a research note Wednesday. “Large-scale solar companies are siding with the
> utilities they sell to, in opposition to SolarCity and other rooftop
> installers.”
>
> First Solar, based in Tempe, Arizona, has long supported utility
> generation over rooftop installers, with Chief Executive Officer James
> Hughes writing a 2013 opinion piece in the Arizona Republic saying solar
> homes don’t pay their fair share of the grid.
>
> The Brattle Group report was prepared for First Solar, with support from
> the Edison Electric Institute. It evaluated data from Xcel Energy Inc.’s
> power grid in Colorado and found that the cost of electricity from 300
> megawatts of utility-scale, solar farms was “roughly one-half the cost per
> kilowatt-hour of the output from an equivalent 300 megawatts of 5-kilowatt
> residential scale systems.” The ground-mounted systems have tracking
> systems that move the panels as the sun traverses the sky, boosting
> efficiency, while the rooftop panels were fixed.
>
> It projected that costs in 2019 for large-scale solar farms would be 6.6
> cents to 11.7 cents a kilowatt-hour, while power from a typical residential
> system would cost 12.3 cents to 19.3 cents a kilowatt-hour.
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