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:
Option 1: Stay connected to 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.
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!
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.
Planning hurdles are still regarded as the Achilles heel of renewables developments, despite a big…
EPBC waves through proposed wind farm on the proviso that its up to 110 turbines…
One of the biggest batteries in Australia's main grid reaches full output, as its owner's…
Three Australian companies have helped deliver the last of the foundations of the only wind…
High fixed network tariffs lock in legacy cost structures, and protects the network's revenue position…
"Evil, poisonous and treacherous" was the description from one Queenslander about the central NSW battery…