Applied Energy | 2021

Micro-economic assessment of residential PV and battery systems: The underrated role of financial and fiscal aspects

 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract The German government, in order to reach its renewable energy targets, has promoted the deployment of solar PV. Small residential PV installations coupled with battery energy storage systems are gaining momentum, as self-consumption has grown in attractiveness. We conducted an economic analysis to assess the profitability and optimal configuration of these technologies from the perspective of heterogeneous households that are subject to the current German regulatory framework. In this regard, we consider heterogeneous potential for self-consumption of electricity (e.g. household size, energy efficiency), as well as heterogeneous financial (i.e., metrics, parameters, sources of financing) and fiscal (i.e., tax treatment, tax rate) aspects. We find that the usage of alternative financial metrics (i.e., payback period, real internal rate of return and net present value), as criterion to evaluate profitability, remarkably affects rankings of system configurations. Secondly, fiscal aspects are crucial to assess profitability and marginally relevant for optimal system configuration, while financial aspects are greatly important for both matters. Our results on optimal battery coupling (as opposite to stand-alone PV) show that rates of adoption range between 0% and 94% of the analyzed load profiles, following the variation of such finance-related dimensions (e.g. discount rates, inflation, debt versus equity financing). We conclude that such findings on the impact of such factors, are greatly relevant to design cost-efficient and effective policies that aim to foster energy transitions, both in Germany and elsewhere, especially in a time of very low interest rates.

Volume 281
Pages 115667
DOI 10.1016/j.apenergy.2020.115667
Language English
Journal Applied Energy

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