The national lab’s latest report finds ongoing declines in PV system prices, with residential system prices falling to $4 per watt in 2015.
The move follows the U.S. utility leader’s acquisition of a majority stake in REC Solar last year.
The U.S. distributed solar installer has partnered with Belgium’s Electrabel to begin installing rooftop solar panels across the country.
This is the first such system installed in Colorado since the Department of Energy expanded the $215 million Weatherization Assistance Program to include low-income solar.
The project on Oahu will be one of the larger PV plants build in Hawaii to date.
Canadian Solar predicts that Recurrent will complete more than 1 GW of PV projects in the United States this year.
ACC Chair Little has proposed requiring 30% renewable energy by 2030, scrapping the DG carve-out and potentially adding incentives for energy storage.
New York City should be great for solar PV. But it isn’t. Despite policy leadership from the state, local installers are facing crippling bureaucratic challenges, and many have chosen to build rooftop solar elsewhere.
While the solar-specific charge was dropped as part of a settlement, the utility will increase fixed charges on its Texas customers.
The San Diego utility says that the battery systems will allow it to improve reliability and integrate higher levels of renewables. AES plans to finish the systems by the end of January 2017.
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