In May 2015, Austin Energy received a firm bid for solar energy for less than 4 cents per kWh. Responding to an RFP seeking up to 600 MW of solar capacity, the bid is one of the lowest solar bids ever seen in a utility solicitation.
Key Details
Implications
Large utility-scale solar projects, with their scale economies, in areas with good solar irradiance continue to improve their cost competitiveness with other supply options. Upcoming changes to the ITC (i.e., 30% to 10% in 2017) will cause a temporary hiccup but will unlikely disrupt the long-term trend toward increasing cost competitiveness for the utility-scale solar industry. Instead, the event will mark an important transition as the industry moves from policy to market drivers. First Solar CEO, Jim Hughes, highlighted this point by recently calling the ITC “irrelevant,” and forecasting it will take 18 months for technology price declines to offset price increases associated with changes to the ITC.
More Information
Austin Monitor: Solar Prices Keep Dropping, Says Austin Energy
GreenTech Media: Cheapest Solar Ever
Austin Energy Presentation: Resource Plan Update: Solar RFP & Independent Review
Utility Dive: NV Energy Buys Utility-Scale Solar at Record Low Price Under 4 Cents/kWh
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