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Battery Storage For Commercial Photovoltaic (PV) Solar Systems

In the last few years, commercial battery storage technology has advanced rapidly making solar battery storage a practical option for many organizations.

This video explains how to lower electricity costs using battery storage to reduce utility demand charges. Renewable energy like Sunpower solar panels  and commercial battery storage solution might make sense for your organization.

Demand Charges Explained:

Knowing how your electric use is billed and how your demand and energy charges are calculated will help you understand and manage your total energy costs.

demand

Understanding the energy charge Energy charge is the calculation of the amount of electricity kilowatt-hours (kWh) consumed during the billing period.

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Each of the ten light bulbs above uses 100 watts of electricity. If all ten are lit for one hour, they will have consumed one kWh of electricity: 10 light bulbs x 100 watts x one hour = 1,000 watt-hours (1 kWh) Your meter records the amount of energy used on-peak and off-peak.

Understanding the demand charge

 

Demand is the rate at which you consume electricity – or the amount needed to power your business at any given point in time. Your demand charges are based on the highest level of electricity supplied at one time during the billing period and at the time of day it’s needed by your business. A single light bulb demands 100 watts of electricity at any given moment. In the energy charge example, the ten light bulbs demanded 1,000 watts (1 kW) of electricity to operate.

Understanding the energy charges on your bill

Your bill will indicate how much energy was used on-peak, we will use the time frame between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. Monday – Friday, as peak in our example. We’ll use the hours between 9 p.m. and 9 a.m. Monday – Friday, weekends and designated holidays as off-peak. Most all utilities designate weekends and holidays as off peak.

Understanding the demand charges on your bill

You will see demand charges appear as two separate charges on your bill. The first is the On-peak demand charge, this charge is applicable to your peak time frame in addition to your peak rates. You will also see Off-peak demand charges and Off peak rates as well. Most utilities use a 15-minute interval as a period of time to measure your highest level of demand usage. This is when you use the most electric power to run your equipment, lights, etc. During the on-peak time period, in our example, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays you get charged an incrementally higher rate. This charge applies only to the rate or volume of electricity your purchase during the peak time frame.

The purpose of your solar electricity and battery system is to discharge your battery during your peak load time frame. This will allow you to eliminate or significantly reduce your demand fees and lower your electricity bill.

Call today at 480-636-0321 to learn how Sunpower solar systems and battery backup can save your business money on your electricity bill.

 

Sunpower Solar Carports and Solar Canopies

Solar carports also known as “solar canopies” are an increasingly popular type of onsite commercial solar installation. These versatile structures offer features that provide more than just long term energy savings including covered parking, solar parking lot lights and integrated vehicle charging stations. 

This is a simple video of a typical Sunpower carport structure we install for our clients for a commercial solar panel carport solar system. Check it out, this might be the right solution for your organization.

In general these are one of the most common dual purpose solar systems. They add value in terms of solar electricity, covered parking for staff of customers and maximize limited space in urban solar installation scenarios. One of the biggest benefits of a commercial solar system is they can stabilize a business’ cash flow. This can also provide an opportunity to invest energy savings in various areas of the company or organization.

Call us today at 480-636-0321 to learn how much we can help lower your operating costs with a renewable energy solar system by Sunpower. 

Commercial Solar 30% Investment Tax Credit Extended by 2 More Years

This is great news! Essentially, the IRS has given commercial businesses the opportunity to take full advantage of the 30% tax credit amount for two more years.  That’s good news for your finance department that wants to capture the financial benefits on your tax statements to offset your tax liabilities.

For all practical purposes, medium- and large-scale solar power projects that expect to take a year to two (or more) for development and construction just got a two year extension on the Investment Tax Credit (ITC).

Per the ‘Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, Pub. L. 115-123, Div. D, Title I, § 40411, 132 Stat. 150 (BBA 2018)‘, and published in Notice 2018-59, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has officially noted that it is “replacing the requirement to place energy property in service by a certain date with a requirement to begin construction by a certain later date.”

Meaning that instead of your solar project having to finish by December 31st, 2019, it must now begin (defined below in two specific ways) on or by that date t0 qualify for 30%. This same logic applies to the follow two years and their 26% and 22% tax credits.

The IRS notes that there are two methods for ‘establishing beginning of construction’ – the Physical Work Test or the Five Percent Safe Harbor.

Onsite physical work can take many forms, however, it does include any of the following “preliminary activities”:

(a) planning or designing; (b) securing financing; (c) exploring; (d) researching; (e) conducting mapping and modeling to assess a resource; (f) obtaining permits and licenses; (g) conducting geophysical, gravity, magnetic, seismic and resistivity surveys; (h) conducting environmental and engineering studies

It is notable that manufacturing of hardware necessary to the project that is done off-site counts toward physical work, including assembly of “racks and rails, inverters, and transformers.” However, if those components come from inventory or are normally held in inventory, then they aren’t allowed to be considered “physical work.”

The Five Percent Safe Harbor provision states that construction will be considered as having begun if the taxpayer has paid or incurred – per Treas. Reg. § 1.461-1(a) – 5% of more of the total cost of the project. This does not include land costs.

Keith Martin of Norton Rose Fulbright notes that an equipment or service purchase – a ‘bare payment’ alone – can account for the 5% rule if it is delivered within 31/2 months.

Once work begins, it must keep going – meeting a continuity requirement.

 

Real world consequences

Also noted by Martin, is that the IRS guidance is not addressed to the directly owned residential solar power market – as this is the corporate focused Investment Tax Credit, and not the Residential Renewable Energy Tax Credit. However, it does apply to third party owned residential solar systems that solar companies lease or use to sell electricity to homeowners.

In the larger commercial and utility scale projects this ruling will absolutely be put into the spreadsheets of financiers at the utilities, which have explicitly stated these solar power tax benefits are driving their decision-making. For instance, in Xcel Energy’s recent long-term plan – which included solar power bids as low as 2.2¢/kWh – the company stated:

Bidders’ ability to take full advantage of the full federal PTC and ITC combined with falling costs for renewable technologies  resulted in a robust pool of wind, solar with battery, and solar bids at unprecedented pricing.

This two year window will give investors and utilities reasonable motivation to invest in more projects, even as end of year dates arrive. And this in turn can have repercussions for fossil generation, as Xcel noted that this would allow it to close two coal plants a decade early.

Conversely, there could also be projects whose timelines are extended. For instance, the above Xcel Energy projects could potentially be pushed back up to two years under the expectation of continued declines in hardware pricing for solar panels, batteries and other components.

This article was originally published in PV Magazine on  

Solar Electricity Battery Storage Architect, Energy Hub, & Intelligent Energy Management System

The Eguana Elevate battery system is operated by Pason Power’s Storage Architect; an intelligent EMS system with built in financial modeling and remote monitoring tools. With more than 40 years experience and millions of dollars in monitoring and control assets deployed in the oil ;gas drilling sector,  Pason Power is well positioned to deliver energy storage performance with confidence. This is one of the few different storage systems we install for our commercial customer base. If you are serious about storage the Eguana Elevate system is perfect for you.

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Eguana’s popular AC Battery product line has been expanded to include larger three phase models for commercial applications. The AC Battery features full integration between PCS, BMS, and Battery to deliver the industry’s highest performance and longevity in an extremely flexible package.  Monitoring and control of all PCS and battery data  is available through a single MESA compliant interface making the AC Battery easily dispatched by any aggregation network. A convenient location inside the enclosure is provided to install a customer supplied networking gateway.

With rising electricity prices from coast to coast, intelligent building energy management systems have been growing in sophistication and popularity.  What energy management providers have been missing is the ability to time shift, peak shave, and deliver services back to the utility.  By integrating energy storage with broader building energy management solutions, rather than making storage a standalone project, the battery system can deliver higher value and be installed with lower upfront cost.  Energy storage will achieve its true potential when it gets deployed as part of an overall building energy management system, and only a factory assembled product can make it happen.

Electric Vehicle adoption is driving the expansion of public EV charging networks.  However, fast charging sites are being saddled with high demand charges that raise prices for customers and undermine convenience.  The advanced control networks that manage these sites are capable of delivering grid services, and much has been written about the potential to dispatch the batteries in parked vehicles for grid support capacity.  But grid service contracts rely on capacity being there when its needed, customers prefer to have their battery filled while parked at a charging station, and vehicle manufacturers are wary of the impact of additional cycling on warranty exposure.    Adding an AC Battery at the charging site solves both problems: reducing charging costs by offsetting the fast charging demand, and allowing the charging network operator to become an energy storage aggregator and earn additional revenue from grid services.

Contact us today at 480.636.0321 to learn how solar panels and battery storage will make your business more profitable now and in the future.

NCIA’s Cannabis Industry Lobby Days!

NCIA’s Aaron Smith re-caps another successful Cannabis Industry Lobby Days! Watch this video to hear more about NCIA Members’ experiences and why you should plan to join us next year in D.C.

NCIA’s staff and professional lobbying consultants work year-round in our nation’s capital to build support for the cannabis business community and the policy changes needed for our industry to reach its full potential. That work has led us to the tipping point we are seeing today and it’s all been made possible by the financial support of our members.  This industry is made composed of legitimate businesses that positively impact our communities by providing job, wealth creation and medicine to people within those communities. Support the NCIA and support cannabis.