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My PV Story

I've always been interested in Photovoltaic power. I had assumed that it was something out of my reach until one day I was surfing the net and happened upon:
http://www.ccdemo.org/SolarPower/SolarPower.html


This site led me to the website for Light Energy Systems (http://www.lightenergysystems.com).

That most important thing I learned was that a PV system might be possible. I learned about California Energy Commission "buy down". The fact the the incentive had a larger subsidy for early adopters inspired to do some more research. The Light Energy Systems was good enough to provide enough pricing information for me to get started. Light Energy also had a very nice program that allowed me to pay the $75 for a site visit to get an estimate. I had them visit.

I made a math error when I initially looked at the cost of systems versus capacity. I was off by a factor 10. I thought a system was going to produce 10x the power at given price point. At that price performance a system was a no-brainer. I started learning more and was proceeding to make a system happen.

When I discovered my error things slowed down a little bit. But in retrospect, the error was fortuitous, the fire was lit, I knew that a PV system was possible. I went back to analyzing the economic model to justify the cost of the system.

The economic puzzle was solved in several pieces.

First problem was the opportunity cost of the capital I would put in to the system. I realized I didn't have to use any of my investments to fund the system. I could put the equity of the house to work. This basically converted the cost to a stream of payments for the lifetime of the loan.

The final piece was the realization that I didn't have to have a payback in the traditional sense. I had initially valued the system only for the energy it was going to produce, I realized this incorrect. First, the system I wanted had a battery back up, that additional functionally above grid power.

The second "feature" is green power! People pay extra money for organic food, for "fair trade" coffee, etc. The other realization is people drive around $80,000 sports car and no one ever asks what the pay back is car purchase.

The bottom line was I was looking at around $100 extra expense per month to get battery backed up green power. That was a much easier decision.

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