Home news features general solar Report: Building codes slow home solar in U.S.

Report: Building codes slow home solar in U.S.

Share

aaWildly ranging utility and state solar incentives are part of the reason for what can be radical differences in home solar costs across different states and even across different counties and cities within the same state in the U.S.

Another reason might be your local building codes, according to a new White Paper report released by SunRun, one of the nation's largest solar companies.

The report, “The Impact of Local Permitting on the Cost of Solar Power,” reveals that inconsistent local solar permitting and inspection processes add an average of over $2,500 per home installation. A direct response to the Department of Energy’s (DOE) request for granular data on non-equipment solar costs, the report specifies how the DOE can take immediate action to solve local permitting problems and reduce unnecessary costs.

“Our research identifies inconsistencies in local permitting as one of the most critical roadblocks to a sustainable, subsidy-free solar industry,” said SunRun CEO and Co-founder Edward Fenster. “To tackle this challenge head-on, the DOE can use existing guidelines it has already funded to standardize local permitting and deliver the equivalent of a new $1 billion solar subsidy over five years.”

Local permitting red tape keeps solar off of millions of American homes and businesses and seriously jeopardizes our ability to be competitive with entrenched fossil fuels.
-- Rhone Resch, president and CEO of Solar Energy Industries Association

In the report, solar installers nationwide indicate repeatedly that local permitting is the most stubborn cost they face, preventing them from making solar affordable for millions of Americans. By comparison, countries such as Germany have simpler processes that keep solar installation costs 40 percent lower than in the United States.

Germany reports about one million new home solar power installations in the past two years alone, whereas the total number of homes ever to go solar in the United States has just broken 120,000. SunRun’s report recommends the DOE lead a new Residential Solar Permitting Initiative, starting with high-volume cities that impact more than 50 percent of the solar market. The recommendations include a contest with grant rewards for cities that make the most effective and comprehensive improvements.

“Local permitting red tape keeps solar off of millions of American homes and businesses and seriously jeopardizes our ability to be competitive with entrenched fossil fuels,” said Rhone Resch, president and CEO of SEIA. “Policymakers need to recognize that these additional costs put an undue burden on new, clean technologies like solar that are trying to create jobs in the U.S.”

Endorsements for SunRun’s report underscore the industry’s sense of urgency when it comes to standardizing the permitting process. A coalition of 22 leading installers from across the country endorses this paper, as well as industry organizations such as The Sierra Club, SolarTech, and Vote Solar. The report is currently under review with the DOE and available at www.sunrunhome.com/permitting.

Related articles-->

prius-resources-page-image Like this story? Interested in the solar EV/PHEV synergy? Join our Sun Miles® Club and start meeting & interacting with other people around the world who want to drive, or already are driving, their cars on sun! Register to join us today!

  Like this story? Consider subscribing to Solar Charged Driving's RSS Feed
Do you live in the Greater Los Angeles area?
Do you want your home -- & electric car -- to Run on Sun
®?
Contact Run On Sun® today -- and tell them you were referred by us, SolarChargedDriving.Com!

Run On Sun® --> questions@RunOnSun.com
626-793-6025

 

 

run-on-sun-250
®
Google web search
Go solar today!
rec-solar-logo2
Contact a REC Solar representative from your region today -- and tell them you were referred by us, SolarChargedDriving.Com!

California
South and East L.A., Orange County, Riverside County and San Diego
Audrey Cordell
(805) 547-2600
acordell@recsolar.com

California
North and West L.A., Palm Springs/Desert, Ventura, Santa Barbara, Central Coast
*Also -- Hawaii and Oregon

Seth Pearson
(805) 540-7602
spearson@recsolar.com

California
Bay and North Bay
Evan Sarkisian
(408) 747-2484
esarkisian@recsolar.com

California
Sacramento, Central Valley and Bakersfield
Ted Vergis

(805) 540-7642
tvergis@recsolar.com

Colorado
Brian Sharpe

(303) 859-7704
bsharpe@recsolar.com

Arizona
Andrew Frederick
(805) 547-2635
afrederick@recsolar.com
rec-solar-logo2





Run On Sun!

run-on-sun-145
Live in the LA area? Want to run your home -- and EV -- on sun?

Contact Run On Sun® today -- and tell them you were referred by us, SolarChargedDriving.Com!

Run On Sun® -->
questions@RunOnSun.com
(626) 793-6025