Australia installed another 63MW rooftop solar in September

Australian households and businesses continue to install rooftop solar at a steady clip, with a total of 63.7MW of residential solar PV systems installed across the states and territories in the month of September.

As you can see in the tables below, Australian households installed rooftop solar at a rate of  more than 12,000 systems a month in October, down a little from June – and less than half the capacity when feed-in tariffs were at their peak – but still higher than most experts predicted.

Screen Shot 2015-10-13 at 1.18.59 pm

And the percentage of installed capacity from commercial systems (over 10kW) also remained steady, at 23 per cent – or a total of 14.8MW for the month.

Screen Shot 2015-10-13 at 1.14.48 pm

As you can see in the graph below, Queensland remains the biggest market for small-scale solar, ahead of New South Wales, and then Victoria, Western Australia and South Australia. NSW still leads the market for commercial-scale installations, just ahead of Victoria.

Screen Shot 2015-10-13 at 1.23.08 pm

Green Energy Markets said in its report that STC creation so far in 2015 was tracking 10 per cent lower than the same point last year, with the spot STC price opening the month at $39.85 and closing it at $39.95.

Comments

4 responses to “Australia installed another 63MW rooftop solar in September”

  1. MaxG Avatar
    MaxG

    While I understand there are less people in the NT than in the other states, it would have been nice to see graph with % of population having solar. If the NT still ranks lower, maybe the power companies up there, do not use the same charging regime as the other states — hence, if this would be the case, it would prove that proper charging would have been less ‘negative’ for the energy sector (also less of drive to install solar). Just curious 🙂

    1. Matt Avatar
      Matt

      We effectively only have one power company which is the government owned Jacana Energy (retail) and Territory Generation (generation) which are both part of PowerWater (NT Gov). There are a few other retailers but they have restrictions on what they can offer – only to large commercial / government customers over certain Kw/h consumption or something.

      But I thought the same. Would be good to see a per capita basis of Kw installed capacity considering only ~ 250k population.

  2. trackdaze Avatar
    trackdaze

    Not exactly gangbusters. But I guess installed capacity is still growing above 15%pa. What is disappointing is the commercial sector.

    1. john Avatar
      john

      Yes it is not exactly very good to see all the wasted roof spaces particularly shopping centres without any solar at all.
      Even the car parking covers in Europe are typically covered in solar panels.
      Considering the 56 hours of sun power a week this is a very poor use of the available resources.

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