We have been getting quotes for our home in Chandler, AZ. We are in SRP territory. Our last salesman (Harmon) told us that because we are with SRP and they re-set with the April bill that we shouldn't try to get the bigger system that would generate 80-90% of our yearly use, but a system that does about 63% of our yearly use because we would never be able to use the credits when they were needed for the summer months. We have the roof space. Thoughts?
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We have been getting quotes for our home in Chandler, AZ. We are in SRP territory. Our last salesman (Harmon) told us that because we are with SRP and they re-set with the April bill that we shouldn't try to get the bigger system that would generate 80-90% of our yearly use, but a system that does about 63% of our yearly use because we would never be able to use the credits when they were needed for the summer months. We have the roof space. Thoughts?
If you get billed each month rather than a single billing at true-up time, you may end up paying up front for power and then seeing a reduced bill later. That will cost you some fraction of a year's worth of interest payments, but the credits will eventually get applied. If you cannot use last year's credit, you will instead get to apply next year's credit in advance of next winter.SunnyBoy 3000 US, 18 BP Solar 175B panels. -
The choice of date for zeroing out the bill credits will affect the first (and last) years of PV use. There is no way that it can cause the credits "never" to be usable.
If you get billed each month rather than a single billing at true-up time, you may end up paying up front for power and then seeing a reduced bill later. That will cost you some fraction of a year's worth of interest payments, but the credits will eventually get applied. If you cannot use last year's credit, you will instead get to apply next year's credit in advance of next winter.Comment
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You lose one summer's worth of credits, not every summer's credits!
If you are looking at a 20 year use period, the loss of one summer's production credit in the first year will delay payback but should not affect your decision on how big to size the system for the majority of the system life.SunnyBoy 3000 US, 18 BP Solar 175B panels.Comment
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Yes, but the following summer's credits roll through to that winter.
You lose one summer's worth of credits, not every summer's credits!
If you are looking at a 20 year use period, the loss of one summer's production credit in the first year will delay payback but should not affect your decision on how big to size the system for the majority of the system life.Comment
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Thanks. I am just going in circles with my husband on this. So the Spring/Winter we use the least amount of power, and the summer the most. The system would produce the most in the Spring/early Summer and go down as the heat kicks in here. It's no wonder SRP chooses the end of April as their cut-off. Then it's pennies on the dollar for the credits. My parents have APS and it's a much better deal as they switch at years' end.Comment
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We have been getting quotes for our home in Chandler, AZ. We are in SRP territory. Our last salesman (Harmon) told us that because we are with SRP and they re-set with the April bill that we shouldn't try to get the bigger system that would generate 80-90% of our yearly use, but a system that does about 63% of our yearly use because we would never be able to use the credits when they were needed for the summer months. We have the roof space. Thoughts?Comment
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Your sales rep is correct. As a very general rule of thumb you don't want to size a system larger than 66% of annual usage for SRP customers and in many cases even less. Not only is production credit expiration and issue with SRP, so is the structure of their time of use plan. You're receiving good advice from this rep. It takes a bit of time for it to make sense, but I'm sure the rep can sit down and go over the math with you if you'd like.Comment
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Draw a time line covering multiple years and make a sliding scale that covers 12 months. Now draw the energy production graphs and energy use graphs which repeat unchanged year after year.
Wherever you move the sliding scale, it will cover exactly one year of use and one year of production. All that will vary will be whether each one peaks earlier or later in the one year window.
Once you get past the first fraction of a year, where it will make a difference because you have less than a full 12 month window, it will not matter at all where the window sits. The net surplus or deficit will be exactly the same. All that will change is when you pay higher or lower bills.
Net will be exactly the same.
Now there are a lot of other factors about your POCO which influence how much production makes sense, and those include consumption tier pricing, time of day pricing, seasonal adjustments and whether or not you get anything (like wholesale rate) at the end of the year. But when in the calendar year the true-up comes is not one of them, except for the very first year.SunnyBoy 3000 US, 18 BP Solar 175B panels.Comment
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Draw a time line covering multiple years and make a sliding scale that covers 12 months. Now draw the energy production graphs and energy use graphs which repeat unchanged year after year.
Wherever you move the sliding scale, it will cover exactly one year of use and one year of production. All that will vary will be whether each one peaks earlier or later in the one year window.
Once you get past the first fraction of a year, where it will make a difference because you have less than a full 12 month window, it will not matter at all where the window sits. The net surplus or deficit will be exactly the same. All that will change is when you pay higher or lower bills.
Net will be exactly the same.
Now there are a lot of other factors about your POCO which influence how much production makes sense, and those include consumption tier pricing, time of day pricing, seasonal adjustments and whether or not you get anything (like wholesale rate) at the end of the year. But when in the calendar year the true-up comes is not one of them, except for the very first year.
The way SRP has it set up, you will either pay them through the nose out of pocket in the summer or, if you size large enough to not buy from SRP during the summer, you will get screwed at the following April's trueup. I fully expect APS to soon have a "Hey, wait a minute" moment as they realize they can also change to an April trueup and charge solar customers more without appearing to raise rates or add fees.Comment
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OK, that is much more than just an April true-up, it is an April true-up and no ability to apply credits to earlier parts to the cycle year. That is definitely against the spirit although probably not the letter of net metering. PG&E would not be able to get that past the regulators here in CA.SunnyBoy 3000 US, 18 BP Solar 175B panels.Comment
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I think it is called a monthly true-up with an annual zero-out in April. Seems like a pretty restrictive program, they should fix that.
I have a monthly true-up with no zero-out for the generation portion of my PG&E build. I pay my generation fees/credits to Marin Clean Energy and my distribution goes through PG&E with the annual true-ups. My statement is pretty complicated and I have only been on the plan for 2 months so I haven't seen how it will work in practice.Comment
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