Another 4,000 Victorian solar rebates snapped up in 80 minutes

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One Step Off The Grid

Solar Victoria is confident it can put the challenges faced by the Victorian solar rebate program behind it, as increased allocations and improvements to the application website make for a smoother first round of October rebate applications.

The allocation of rebates under the Victorian Solar Homes scheme have continued at their rapid pace, with an allocation of 4,000 new rebates made available for the start of October being snapped up in just 80 minutes.

Applications opened at 9am this morning, and were fully exhausted by 10:20am.

Solar Victoria, the authority administrating the scheme, made some amendments to the operation of the rebate website, including more detailed information about when the website was overloaded, which it believes has reduced the stress and criticisms that have plagued the program.

Solar Victoria said that while the rebates continue to be exhausted very quickly, applications in the October round of rebates encountered fewer issues accessing the rebate website and lodging applications.

“This morning’s rebate release went smoothly and now thousands more Victorians are on their way to having cleaner, cheaper solar energy at home,” Solar Victoria CEO Stan Krpan said.

“Customers who missed out this time around will have many more opportunities to secure a rebate in the weeks ahead.”

The Victorian Government has faced calls to overhaul the design of the rebate scheme, with earlier monthly allocations of smaller numbers of rebates having inadvertently placed a cap on Victorian solar installations.

When the allocation of rebates commenced in July, just 3,333 rebates were available, which was somewhat less than the average number of systems already being installed in Victoria.

As the rebates are rather generous, up to $2,250 per Victorian household, many prospective solar customers that missed out on a rebated opted to delay the installation of systems.

This took the Victorian solar industry to a crisis point, with some installers struggling to maintain their businesses in an environment were sales became dependent on the success of customers in winning rebates in earlier allocations.

Industry representatives, including the Smart Energy Council, called on the Victorian Government to either introduce stricter means-testing for the rebates, or to increase the allocations of rebates available each month.

Solar Victoria adopted to increased the number of rebates available, almost tripling the September allocation to 9,750 rebates, and increasing the October allocation to 6,500.

To read the full story on RenewEconomy’s sister site, One Step Off The Grid, click here…

Michael Mazengarb is a Sydney-based reporter with RenewEconomy, writing on climate change, clean energy, electric vehicles and politics. Before joining RenewEconomy, Michael worked in climate and energy policy for more than a decade.

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