Why Americans pay double for solar (but won’t forever)

Published by

CleanTechnia

I often get flak when I publish research on the cost trajectory for solar (e.g. my Rooftop Revolution report estimates 100 million Americans reaching grid parity by 2021). About half think I’m too conservative, and half think I’m too overconfident that solar will continue to drop in price by 7% per year indefinitely.

But I’m not alone in perceiving an enormous cost reduction opportunity for solar in the United States. An article in Forbes last week suggested that we can “Cut The Price Of Solar In Half By Cutting Red Tape.” It provides a chart (reproduced below) like one I published in March, that shows how a similarly sized residential solar array in Germany costs 60% less than one built in the U.S.

This anecdote from a colleague illustrates the ridiculous disparity in red tape between the two nations (and consequently, the enormous opportunity):

There’s an article in the most recent issue of PHOTON describing a German family that got a 4.6 kW PV array installed and interconnected to their roof 8 days after calling a solar installer for the first time. The homeowner had a proposal from the installer within 8 hours. The installer called the utility the morning of the installation to request an interconnect that afternoon. The installer called at 10am, the utility came and installed 2 new meters and approved the interconnect at 2:37pm– the same day. The online registration of the PV system with Federal Grid agency and approval of the feed-in tariff took 5 minutes.

I’m sure that not every project gets completed that fast in Germany, but an interconnection and permitting process that takes less than a day?! 10 times that…would still be just incredible.

By comparison, New York City’s permitting goal under Solar America Cities was 100 days (before Solar America Cities it took 365 days).

[emphasis mine]

As I’ve mentioned before, the difference is mostly in “soft costs,” not hardware, and these cost barriers are solved by policy, not technological, innovation solutions. For example, soft costs include an enormous paperwork burden for US solar installers, pictured at the top (photo taken from the Forbes post on cutting costs), and already there are policy ideas that significantly reduce these costs.

To add fuel to the fire, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory just released a chart explaining much of why U.S. residential solar costs twice as much as residential solar in Germany. The conclusion? Soft costs. (See an interactive version of the chart here.)

So, is it too ambitious to assume the price of solar continues to fall by 7% per year? On the contrary, if the cost of solar continues at that pace, it will take the US until 2025 – 13 years! – to match today’s cost of solar in Germany. Can anyone honestly claim we’ll remain so far behind for so long?

When you add potential hardware innovations (e.g. like this) to the soft cost reduction opportunity, the cost of solar is likely to keep falling rapidly in the United States.

This post originally appeared on ILSR’s Energy Self-Reliant States blog.
Clean Technica (http://s.tt/1oh2O) – Reproduced with permission.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Why an oil crisis is bad news for Australia’s biggest coal state – and how to break the cycle

One state in Australia remains particularly vulnerable to global oil shocks because it hasn't built…

13 March 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: How the world’s fourth biggest economy plans to reach 100 pct clean energy

David Hochschild, the head of the California Energy Commission, on how the world's fourth biggest…

13 March 2026

When will the energy sector understand the National Energy Objective? When will governments enforce its intent?

Fifty years of cheap gas and electricity and intensive marketing have distorted perceptions. Every element…

13 March 2026

“It is paramount:” AEMO says system and market operator functions must be kept together

Australian Energy Market Operator says its system and market operation functions should not be separated…

13 March 2026

Powerful new rooftop solar panel promises system sizes “previously out of reach”

The Clean Energy Council has approved a new PV module with around 25 per cent…

13 March 2026

Webinar: The new era of home energy storage in Australia

An in-depth webinar exploring the next phase of residential battery storage in Australia, brought to…

13 March 2026