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Solar Comes of Age: SolarCity to Double PV Systems on American Homes by 2016

By Stephen Lacey, Climate Progress
September 8, 2011   |   5 Comments

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5 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 5
September 9, 2011
Why military installations? We are moving away from the war/weapons manufacturer high priced bad trip. Quit using our taxpayer trillions for matters of war. Get these installations on the rooftops of low income, senior and the disabled.

What a poor idea.... these are long term leases right? The consumer never realizes the benefits of ownership. It all goes into the pockets of the "banksters" ... how sad...
Comment
2 of 5
September 9, 2011
This is excellent. Most people can not afford the upfront cost for a system. If at the end of the day, you get clean energy, cheaper (or at the same rate) than grid, and added jobs to this economy, why not?

But I bet you that the residential work they'll do will only happen in states with generous rebate programs.
Comment
3 of 5
September 9, 2011
1. This article says that SolarCity will sell electricity to the end user. Does this mean that they are abandoning their predominant model of leasing panels in favor of a power-purchase model? If so, that's a major strategic shift.

2. Doubling the number of residential PV systems in 5 years makes a good headline, but it's not as impressive as it may seem at first glance. Here's the year-by-year installed base of residential PV since 2005, in megawatts of installed capacity, and the percentage increase from the previous year (derived from data published by U.S. Solar Market Insight Research):

2005 / 27 / --
2006 / 65 / 141%
2007 / 123 / 89%
2008 / 200 / 63%
2009 / 357 / 79%
2010 / 621 / 74%

In the last four years the installed capacity of residential PV has almost doubled every year, and more than tripled in the last two years (2008 to 2010). Of course, as the installed base grows, you can expect the annual percentage growth to slow. And it is impressive for one company to aim to install 160,000 systems in five years, although it remains to be seen if they can do that in the face of competition from SunRun, Sungevity and many others.
Comment
4 of 5
September 12, 2011
I agree with electric38 and Eric-Mathis.

But kudos to SolarCity just the same. At the end of the day, the more installed pv, the better (within reason). And SolarCity has adroitly exploited the existing power structure to install more solar; Bravo!
Comment
5 of 5
September 16, 2011
And why should this project cost $ 1 billion and not for example, 30 percent of this amount. U.S. Army has too much money?
Solar energy is still completely free.
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