Is now the right time to go off-grid?

Published by

A friend and fellow inventor suggested I should try to answer this question – is it the right time to go off-grid?

We all know that the price of PV systems and battery storage is coming down, at the same time that the cost of grid-provided electricity is going up.  At some point there will be a crossover.  Notice I’m not talking about socket parity at peak output when PV power is already cheaper than grid-provided electricity.

So when will this crossover point for PV with battery storage be reached? Or has it been reached already?

As you might imagine, to formulate a model to answer the question involves many considerations such as your location, your particular domestic circumstances and your expectations about the future cost of PV systems and battery storage.  In the post below, I give my modest contribution to the debate.

Here are my assumptions:

  • As an investor, you can make 3% per year after tax and inflation.
  • You live in a mythical location with an excellent solar resource such that you receive the average amount of sunshine each day.
  • The Capacity Factor of your PV system is 0.18.
  • PV panels will last for 25 years at rated output, so that a 1 kW system would deliver 24 × 365 × 0.18 / 365 = 4.32 kWhr/day each day for 25 years.
  • Your daily electricity requirement is 8.64 kWhr/day, which is exactly the output of a 2 kW system at your mythical location.  Further, half of this is required when the sun is not shining, so you need to store 4.32 kWhr/day.
  • Battery storage costs $1,000 per kWhr, and the batteries are capable of a complete charge/discharge cycle every day for 25 years.  This is a heroic assumption, but hopefully covered by assigning a high price to the cost of storage.
  • After government incentives, the specific cost of an installed PV system is $2/W.
  • Your annual electricity bill today is $1,000 and will not increase in real terms after inflation.
  • To disconnect from the grid, the cost to you of PV panels and storage will be $2 × 2,000 + 4.32 × 1,000 = $8,320, which let’s say you have available for investment.
Now we formulate two options.

Option 1: Stay connected to the grid.

After 25 years of compounding at 3% after tax and inflation, your $8,320 becomes $8,320 × (1.03)^25 = $17,420.
Option 2: Disconnect from the grid

If you invest $1,000 each year (your annual electricity bill) for 25 years at 3% after tax and inflation, it compounds to $1,000 × (1.03^25 – 1)/0.03 = $36,459.  By that stage the PV panels and batteries would need replacement, a cost of $8,320, which leaves a balance of $36,459 – 8,320 = $28,139.

On this grossly simplified calculation, Option 2 is 62% superior to Option 1.

Weaknesses in the assumptions can easily be pinpointed.  For example, I live in Sydney in an all-electric dwelling, and my peak electricity demand is in winter when the daily output of PV panels is below the annual average.  I would need to buy a generator set, which would get substantial use in winter, and I’d have spare power for sale in summer when the utilities wouldn’t pay much for it.  I’d need additional assumptions and/or data about demand, output, the cost of a generator set and the future cost of fuel.  Those calculations are for another day!

Conclusion
My conclusion is that to justify going off the grid for financial reasons, you‘d need to live in an exceptionally favourable location and in an accommodative lifestyle. That’s my conclusion today, but it would be worth repeating the calculation in a few years when circumstances will surely have changed.

Acknowledgement: Thanks to Anthony Kitchener for the interesting suggestion.

Addendum: In comments below, Derek points out that it is not correct to subtract the cost of a new system after 25 years.  So the advantage of Option 2 over Option 1 is 109%, rather than 62%.  This strengthens the case to go off-grid, but doesn’t cause me to change my overall conclusion, particularly in light of other comments about the suitability of battery storage.

Noel Barton is Managing Director of Sunoba Pty Ltd and is developing new concepts for solar thermal power with storage.  He blogs at www.sunoba.blogspot.com.  Republished with permission.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Energy market review must deliver a “new deal” for consumers

Instead of waiting years for a handful of billion-dollar projects, tens of thousands of electricians…

3 December 2024

Wind, solar and rooftop PV set output records, and send coal and gas plunging to new lows

The record season for renewable energy has extended from its traditional spring season into summer,…

2 December 2024

Call to include electrification in expanded small scale solar scheme to help households dump gas

Calls for federal government to revamp the national rooftop solar rebate, instead of killing it…

2 December 2024

Pressure mounts on NSW to follow on solar switch-off mechanism, in new warning on minimum load

New AEMO report details why all Australian states and territories should have an emergency solar…

2 December 2024

Climate damage: Australia faces $7 trillion hit to standard of living

Australia's living standards are forecast to take a $7 trillion hit between now and 2050,…

2 December 2024

A sneak preview of Peter Dutton’s nuclear costings

Any day now, we should be provided with an estimate on what Peter Dutton's plan…

2 December 2024