U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Solar Energy Technologies Program – News
New Jersey Utility Offers $105 Million in Solar Loans
May 7, 2008
New Jersey's Public Service Electric and Gas Company (PSE&G) is now
offering up to $105 million in loans for the installation of solar
photovoltaic systems. The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU)
approved the loan package in early April to support the development
of 30 megawatts of solar power installations throughout the utility's
service area, helping the utility to meet about half of its solar
energy requirement for 2009 and 2010. For now, the loans are only
available for nonresidential customers, but the program will be
expanded to residential customers in the future. PSE&G will provide
loans to cover roughly 40%–60% of a solar project's costs, offering
10-year loans for residential systems and 15-year loans for nonresidential systems. According to PSE&G, the nonresidential loans are
currently being offered at an interest rate of 11.11%.
The borrower can then repay the loan with cash or with solar renewable
energy credits (SRECs), which are created as the solar power systems
generate power. Every 1,000 kilowatt-hours of solar generation result
in one SREC, which PSE&G will value at the current market price or
$475, whichever is higher. The utility's goal is to provide loans for
12 megawatts of solar power at commercial and industrial facilities,
9 megawatts of solar power at municipal and not-for-profit facilities,
6 megawatts of residential solar power, and 3 megawatts of solar power
at multi-family and affordable housing units. As of May 5, the loan
program had committed to more than 3.1 megawatts of commercial and
industrial solar power installations and 330 kilowatts of solar
projects at municipal and not-for-profit facilities. See the
press releases from the New Jersey BPU (PDF 75 KB) and PSE&G,
as well as the PSE&G Solar Loan Program Web page. Download Adobe Reader.
California's Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) is taking
another approach to providing its customers with solar power: the
utility is paying enXco, Inc. to install a 1-megawatt solar power
system, and SMUD's customers can sign up to buy a share of that
system. Through the utility's new SolarShares program, customers will
pay roughly $5–$30 per month to receive 10%–50% of their power from
the solar power system (the utility hasn't released exact cost details
yet). The system is being built near Wilton in southern Sacramento
County and will be completed in July. According to enXco, the project
will be the largest solar power system in the United States that is
built to serve voluntary purchases of solar power by a utility's
customers. See the press releases from enXco and SMUD (PDF 32 KB), as
well as SMUD's "Solar Power for Your Home" Web page.
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