Australian rooftop solar boom rolls on – 351MW in first quarter    By   Giles Parkinson on 5 April 2018 
     
    One Step Off The Grid
      
    Australia’s boom in rooftop solar shows no sign of slowing down, in   fact it is accelerating, with 127MW installed in March and a record   351MW in the first quarter of 2018.
   According to industry  statistician SunWiz, this total for the first  three months of the year  is 56 per cent of last year, 33 per cent ahead  of the previous record  first quarter (in 2013), and more than double the  “miserable”  performance of 2016.
   Households and small businesses are clearly  responding to the  absurdly high grid-prices charged by the big  utilities, and the equally  crazy push by hard right Coalition MPs to  build new coal fired power  stations, which most consumers recognise  would guarantee even higher  grid prices.        “The solar  industry is running white hot, and unlike previous booms  that were  driven by a pending reduction in subsidies, this boom is  driven by  fundamental economics of high electricity prices and highly  affordable  solar power system,” SunWiz director Warwick Johnston says.
   “This boom looks like it will last for a few years at least.”
      
    New South Wales again pipped Queensland, with just under 32MW   installed in the latest month, taking its total to more than 1.5GW.   Queensland still leads the cumulative total with 2.05GW.
   But  other states also head record months, with Victoria and South  Australia  particularly strong. South Australia is now at 859MW of  rooftop solar,  enough to account for nearly 10 per cent of its total  demand. These  are the states that have been hit hardest by recent spikes  in wholesale  prices.
   SunWiz says Victoria now leads the market for systems  of 30kW to  100kW – which is the small to medium size business market,  although  South Australia is also seeing strong growth in this segment.
    The biggest move however is in the 10-20kW market, which suggests  some  households are “maxing out” their rooftops, but also point to   installations in farms and smaller businesses.    The news came as a new online platform, known as   SunSPoT, was launched that can be used to calculate the solar power potential of any rooftop – home, business, factory or school.
    The platform, developed by the Australian PV Institute, along with   UNSW, councils, aims to work with councils and their communities to   provide independent and open source data and tools for distributed   energy decision-making.
   Early-adopter councils, who are already  project partners, including  KuRingGai, Willoughby, Randwick, Northern  Beachesand Lane Cove, with  more cities and towns to be added as the  program expands.
   unSPoTwas developed at UNSW by Dr Anna Bruce  and Dr Jessie Copper,  from the School of Photovoltaics and Renewable  Energy Engineering. The  interactive platform uses GIS data to estimate  the technical potential  of rooftop solar, accounting for the tilt of  roof surfaces and shading  at the site.
   The project has key technology partners in Australian companies   Solar Analytics and   Enosi who contribute energy monitoring, data and an energy exchange platform.
      
    “Australia leads the world in rooftop solar, but there is still lots   of potential for adding more solar, and it’s now the cheapest form of   electricity generation,” said Renate Egan, APVI Chair and Associate   Professor at UNSW.
   “SunSPoT aims to give energy consumers the  information they need to  make a decision how much solar they should  install, and how much they  will save when they do.”
   reneweconomy.com.au
   This article was originally published on RenewEconomy’s sister site,   One Step Off The Grid,   which focuses on customer experience with distributed generation. To   sign up to One Step’s free weekly newsletter, please click   here. |