Bibliography - A. Payne
- Duke, R., Robert H. Williams, and A. Payne, 2005: Accelerating residential PV expansion: demand analysis for competitive electricity markets. Energy Policy, 33(15), doi:10.1016/j.enpol.2004.03.005 1910-1929
[ Abstract ]This article quantifies the potential market for grid-connected, residential photovoltaic (PV) electricity integrated into new homes
built in the US. It complements an earlier supply-side analysis by the authors that demonstrates the potential to reduce PV module
prices below $1.5/Wp by scaling up existing thin-film technology in 100MWp/yr manufacturing facilities. The present article
demonstrates that, at that price, PV modules may be cost effective in 125,000 new home installations per year (0.5GWp/yr). While
this market is large enough to support multiple scaled up thin-film PV factories, inefficient energy pricing and demand-side market
failures will inhibit prospective PV consumers without strong public policy support. Net metering rules, already implemented in
many states to encourage PV market launch, represent a crude but reasonable surrogate for efficient electricity pricing mechanisms
that may ultimately emerge to internalize the externality benefits of PV. These public benefits include reduced air pollution damages
(estimated costs of damage to human health from fossil fuel power plants are presented in Appendix A), deferral of transmission and
distribution capital expenditures, reduced exposure to fossil fuel price risks, and increased electricity system reliability for end users.
Thus, net metering for PV ought to be implemented as broadly as possible and sustained until efficient pricing is in place.
Complementary PV ‘‘buydowns’’ (e.g., a renewable portfolio standard with a specific PV requirement) are needed to jumpstart
regional PV markets.
Direct link to page: http://cmi.princeton.edu/bibliography/results.php?author=4174