In This Issue
- Flanigan’s Net Positive: Really Big and Really Small Solar
- Australian Rooftop Solar Hits 50% of Demand
- Heat Pumps at Scale
- Space-based Solar Power
- Bi-Directional EV Charging
- Home Depot Purging Plastics
- Climate Change Course Now Required at U.C. San Diego
- Flanigan’s Eco-Logic Podcast Updates
Flanigan’s Net Positive: Really Big and Really Small Solar
Miles of solar. Solar for as far as the eye can see. A gigawatt currently, with another gigawatt to come. EcoMotion hired to inspect remediation efforts on a multi-hundred megawatt solar system, many, many “blocks” of solar arrays.
We’re far from the residential rooftops of Santa Monica where EcoMotion began in solar. This is so big and flat that it’s hard to get your bearings in the vast fields of panels… thousands of acres of solar. An industrial sea of solar.
EcoMotion has had a five-person crew onsite in the Central Valley for nearly two weeks conducting the inspection at this massive utility-scale installation, methodically moving from row to row of trackers and panels, checking a random ten percent for new connectors and wire management. We provide thermographic imaging of findings. It’s tedious work; I am proud of the crew. And I reminisce….
It was the early 1990s. Don Osborn was in charge of Sacramento Municipal Utility District’s very exciting and pioneering solar program. He had a far-out dream for the utility, and for the solar industry. He believed that if we would just get worldwide solar production to 60 MW… we’d hit the tipping point. Then solar would take off! That was just over thirty years ago. Today there are 1.2 terrawatts of solar capacity installed… that’s 1,200 GW, or 1,200,000 MW… 20,000 times Don’s dream!
In 2008, I remember visiting the world’s largest solar system in 2008. It was in Leipzig, Germany, the site of a former East German air base. At the time, 10 MW was built and made a huge impression on us. We learned that it was so large that its operators could measure the power captured from moonlight. Another 30 MW was under construction. They built a special five kilometer transmission line to connect the system… and that seemed like a big deal too.
But last week, those memories of solar at SMUD are wiped away with the new solar reality. The “early” German solar tour’s memories of large systems are now dwarfed by our current work… our team immersed in quantum levels more solar… an unimaginable amount of solar. Endless acres of solar on single-axis trackers. It’s a slow-moving water ballet, tables of panels start facing east, then shift to the west to catch the afternoon sun. We hear the tables adjusting for maximum insolation… shifting by degrees throughout the sunlit period.
And now the Net Positive perspective radically shifts from really large… to really small. I marvel at the simplicity of balcony solar in Germany. Fascinating. For many renters, it’s a pair of panels hanging on the balcony railing, like drying laundry. The systems – or “kits” as they are called – are connected to a microinverter plugged into a wall outlet. They feed electricity directly into the home. On sunny days, the power is enough to power an apartment. This is miles away from utility-scale solar in the Central Valley.
Now hundreds of thousands of Germans have these balcony solar systems. They are mini solar systems, completely behind the meter. They can be bought online or “at the supermarket” for ~$550. Regulations limit their size to 800 watts…enough to power a fridge or charge an e-bike. No need for an electrician or permit, they are easy to install and thanks to a potent mix of government policies, more than 550,000 have been installed, half of which were installed in 2023. In the first half of 2024, Germany added 220,000 “plug-in devices,” Now there is a total of 200 MW of balcony solar, albeit a fraction of the 16 GW of residential rooftop solar, but a solar contribution where none existed before.
The technology for these plug-in microsystems has been around for a decade. They combine panels, a small inverter, and a cord to plug into the household electric socket. In 2019 the German government enacted policies to allow for plug-in solar devices.
German lawmakers continue to support balcony solar, earlier this year simplifying permitting and registration requirements. Participants are not required to pay the VAT tax when buying the systems. Lawmakers also passed a law intended to prevent landlords from arbitrarily blocking installations. Cities throughout Germany have offered millions of Euros in subsidies to install balcony solar. Berlin offers 500 Euros, about half the cost of a balcony system. Kits now come with a battery option.
Homeowners have 5 – 8 year paybacks depending on the location and shading. The systems are popular, a tangible way to take action. Owners know to use power during sunshine hours to ensure that washing clothes or charging is generated onsite and is renewable. Balcony solar kits feature an app that tracks daily use. It presents a scorecard… something of a game. The systems are increasingly popular in Austria, the Netherlands, and France.
From big solar to really small solar… In my view we need it all!