Battery storage is emerging as an effective
new strategy for reducing electricity costs for affordable multifamily
rental housing in California, according to the report “Closing
the California Clean Energy Divide: Reducing Electric Bills in
Affordable Multifamily Rental Housing with Solar+Storage”.
Battery storage systems not only provide economic
returns today, they can also preserve the value of solar in an evolving
policy and regulatory environment.
Because batteries empower owners of solar
photovoltaics (PV) systems to take control of the energy they produce
and when they consume it, storage can deliver deeper cost reductions
that can be shared among affordable housing owners, developers, and
tenants.
California has installed numerous integrated solar
and battery storage projects; however, few have served low-income
tenants or owners of affordable rental housing.
This disparity is due to many factors, including a
lack of information about the economics of these systems in multifamily
housing.
To provide that needed information, Clean Energy
Group, California Housing Partnership, and Center for Sustainable
Energy, with analytical support from Geli, are embarking on a series of
reports on solar and storage in California affordable multifamily rental
housing.
The report examines the utility bill impacts of
adding battery storage to stand-alone solar in affordable rental housing
facilities in California’s three investor-owned utility service
territories, each with different rate structures. It is the first such
report on these technologies in this sector in California.
source: http://www.solarserver.com
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