“The ITC extension currently written into the omnibus spending bill will result in a 20-gigawatt annual solar market in the U.S. by 2020,” said Shayle Kann, senior VP of GTM Research. “At that rate, more solar will be installed each year than was added to the grid cumulatively through 2014.”
The impact will be most pronounced in the utility-scale sector, where ITC extension will increase deployments 73 percent through 2020.
“Given price trends in the utility solar sector, the five-year ITC extension will likely result in utility-scale solar contracts being signed for less than 4 cents per kilowatt-hour on a regular basis over the next two years,” said Cory Honeyman, senior analyst at GTM Research.
In the absence of this legislation, the ITC would drop from its current 30 percent to 10 percent (for non-residential and third-party-owned residential systems) and to 0 percent (for host-owned residential systems) on January 1, 2017. Instead, if the omnibus spending bill is passed in its current form, the ITC would step down according to this schedule:
The bill also includes a “commence-construction” provision, allowing projects to come on-line by the end of 2023 and still qualify for larger credits.
Source: Greentech Media. Reproduced with permission.
New data shows unemployed people are also turning to rooftop solar to have certainty about…
South Australia flags new mechanism to underwrite gas generators to ensure it has enough back…
Victoria's SEC emerges as buyer of Victoria solar and battery project that was named a…
Spanish energy giant says it received "strong interest" in green bonds issued to help underwrite…
Melbourne-based shared solar pioneer secures $3.8m to drive local manufacturing of its SolShare technology, which…
The federal government has pushed through EPBC approval for a Victoria solar and big battery…