YeOldeStonecat
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 6,888
- Location
- Englewood Florida
So I'm familiar with full buyout Solar deals....my business colleague (he has Sungevity), and a few friends, have done that. Purchase panels, they offset (often substantially) what you have to purchase from the electric co, usually reducing your monthly electric bill from 30 to 50 even towards 75%.
My colleagues monthly electric bills went from around 180-225/month, down to...60, 50, 40. Worked well for him. But again..he outright bought the panels.
A couple of years ago we talked to a Sungevity rep, but our electrical needs each month are very high and our roof line and trees not the best setup for what they'd have to install to be worth it...it would have basically washed even.
So anyways, our house is on the market, and we're looking to downsize quite a bit. There's a neat ranch around the corner from us, and early this year the owners put a Sungevity system up on it. A 6 kW system but the owners did a 20 year, 0% down, PPA (Purchase Power Agreement) contract. They purchase all the power the panels make, at $0.167 kWh. When it's making a lot in the summer...you gotta pay more..buying all it makes...sometimes around 170 or 180/month. But in the winter, apparently you can dip into that built savings/credit or whatever...I'm not sure.
I'm hesitant on moving further with this house...as since they haven't hard the solar panels for over a year yet (they were installed just Feb of this year)...they don't have a history to compare to. The most detail I got in a forwarded e-mail from the sellers is..."We produced over double what we used this summer, and that gets credited to their account, and in the fall/winter with less sun and less production we can use what we already paid for and was credited to our account".
So that makes me think you purchase every bit produced...and in the better season when it's producing a lot, you can save the credits and use that for free in the winter. But you still have to pay the electric co for whatever additional you need.
I would just love to hear from people that got a solar panel system with this "PPA" type of deal.
The "purchase price" seems high...$0.167 per. Heck, you can purchase from resellers at 8 or 9 cents per kWh....even after the 6 or 12 month intro period is done, often goes to 11 or 12 cents.
My colleagues monthly electric bills went from around 180-225/month, down to...60, 50, 40. Worked well for him. But again..he outright bought the panels.
A couple of years ago we talked to a Sungevity rep, but our electrical needs each month are very high and our roof line and trees not the best setup for what they'd have to install to be worth it...it would have basically washed even.
So anyways, our house is on the market, and we're looking to downsize quite a bit. There's a neat ranch around the corner from us, and early this year the owners put a Sungevity system up on it. A 6 kW system but the owners did a 20 year, 0% down, PPA (Purchase Power Agreement) contract. They purchase all the power the panels make, at $0.167 kWh. When it's making a lot in the summer...you gotta pay more..buying all it makes...sometimes around 170 or 180/month. But in the winter, apparently you can dip into that built savings/credit or whatever...I'm not sure.
I'm hesitant on moving further with this house...as since they haven't hard the solar panels for over a year yet (they were installed just Feb of this year)...they don't have a history to compare to. The most detail I got in a forwarded e-mail from the sellers is..."We produced over double what we used this summer, and that gets credited to their account, and in the fall/winter with less sun and less production we can use what we already paid for and was credited to our account".
So that makes me think you purchase every bit produced...and in the better season when it's producing a lot, you can save the credits and use that for free in the winter. But you still have to pay the electric co for whatever additional you need.
I would just love to hear from people that got a solar panel system with this "PPA" type of deal.
The "purchase price" seems high...$0.167 per. Heck, you can purchase from resellers at 8 or 9 cents per kWh....even after the 6 or 12 month intro period is done, often goes to 11 or 12 cents.