The installed price of distributed solar power fell by 40 cents per watt for U.S. residential and small-scale photovoltaic (PV) systems between 2013 and 2014, while large nonresidential systems saw costs fall by an average of 70 cents per watt, according to new Energy Department data released this week.
And in some major U.S. markets, plummeting prices for solar PV continued into the first six months of this year, with drops of an additional 20 to 50 cents per watt, or 6 to 13 percent, according to DOE's latest "Tracking the Sun" , published this week by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Wide price swings from state to state
The report examined various other drivers for PV system pricing, including system size and configuration (rooftop versus ground-mounted), location by state, whether a system is owned by the site host or by a third party, and whether the host is a for-profit commercial or tax-exempt entity.
Barbose noted, "The fact that such variability exists underscores the need for caution and specificity when referring to the installed price of PV, as clearly there is no single 'price' that uniformly and without qualification characterizes the U.S. market, or even particular market segments, as a whole."
The "Tracking the Sun" report, now in its eighth edition, is based on data collected from more than 400,000 residential and nonresidential PV systems installed between 1998 and 2014 across 42 states, representing more than 80 percent of all distributed PV capacity installed in the United States.
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