New Ontario Feed-In Tariff Rates for Solar Energy
March 13th, 2009 by Nic Morgan
The OPA and Ontario Government have released their new Feed-in Tariff (FIT) rate proposals! If these go through and get finalized (which seems likely), this is excellent news for two reasons - there was quite a bit of uncertainty and several businesses were holding their breath until the new rules were released, and the FIT rates are really good. There’s stuff in there for wind, bio-gas and other renewables, but this is a solar blog, so let’s look at the solar details.
First off, a few terms and a little back ground for people who need it.
Feed-in Tariff (FIT) - A FIT is the price that the government buys power for the grid for special cases. In this case, it means that if you generate power from renewables - solar, wind etc - the OPA will buy the power from you at a higher rate than the cost of electricity. The reason for FITs is that electricity from renewables still costs more than from coal or natural gas. With a FIT, it creates an incentive to generate power using solar energy, and it creates an incentive to sell that power onto the grid. (So you get energy efficiency AND renewable energy, because people want to max out the power they put onto the gird.) Germany and Spain have both implemented FIT programs for solar, which is the main reason those two companies dominate the solar energy industry.
kilowatt (kW) - 1000 watts. This is amount of power that electricity pricing is usually based on.
megawatt (MW) - 1,000 kilowatts or 1,000,000 watts.
kilowatt hour (kWh) - A measure of electrical generation or use. If a clothes dryer used 1000 watts, it would use 1 kWh per hour. (So a 100 watt light bulb uses 0.1 kWh per hour.)
kilowatt hours per kilowatt (kWh/kW) - This is the one that gives me a head ache. Assume you have 1 kW of solar panels, the kWh/kW is the amount of power that you can expect them to generate in a given amount of time - so you can talk about kWh/kW/year or /month or /day etc. In Ontario over the course of a year, you can expect to get between 1100 and 1200 kWh/kW. So, if you went out and bought a 200 watt solar panel, you would need 5 to generate 1 kW of power. If you installed them in Toronto, they would generate roughly 1100-1300 kW, depending on where in Ontario you were. Natural Resources Canada has some cool interactive maps that give you more details, and he’s a zoomed in map of the kWh/kW/year for Ontario. (The small dark patches around Ottawa and Toronto are glitches, but there’s excellent sun in Southern Ontario, especially down near Windsor, and East of Brighton.)
So, FIT Rates. The old rates were 42 ¢/kWh, the new Solar FIT rates for Ontario:
Rooftop
- Less than 10 kW - 80.2 ¢/kWh
- 10 - 100 kW - 71.2 ¢/kWh
- 100-500 kW - 63.5 ¢/kWh
- Greater than 500 kW - 53.9 ¢/kWh
Ground Systems
- Less than 10 MW - 44.2 ¢/kWh
The best part is that you’re guaranteed those rates for 20 years.
So what this mean for the average person in Ontario? Well, the OPA gives a good example in their “Backgrounder” document (link to pdf).
For example, a homeowner in Ontario would be looking at a residential scale Solar PV project of about 3 kilowatts, which costs around $30,000. This would provide enough electricity to meet one third of their consumption and would generate about $7 per day. This payment would result in approximately $2,500 in revenue per year for the homeowner, resulting in about a 12year payback. In addition, the government is expected to introduce plans to provide low cost financing for residential renewable projects, including solar thermal, solar PV and ground source heat pumps.
The prices of solar panels are falling and new lower cost technologies - such as our Sun Stream Windows - are coming onto the market. Right now, with this new system, you’re looking at roughly 12 years to pay back the costs, but that’s going to fall, and fall faster because of this program.
For Morgan Solar, our solar windows are going to do extremely well under this program - I’m assuming that their rooftop prices count for wall mounting too, usually rooftop and “Building Integrated” are taken to mean the same thing, but a south facing wall is almost as good for most solar, and better for the Sun Stream. Also, the Sun Simba HCPV system is designed for huge solar farms and raising the rates (and ending the uncertainty) helps us there too. The increase of 2.2 ¢/kWh means a 10 MW solar farm will generate well over $300,000 per year in additional revenue. Basically, this is good news for everyone.
Tyler Hamilton has blogged about the new FIT program, and he’s got an article in the Toronto Star today too. Here’s the OPA’s press release, and here is the OPA FIT Home page. If you really want to go into the nitty-gritty background on this, start here.
So, all in all, excellent news. This will definitely lead to a boom for renewable energy in Ontario and definitely create renewable energy jobs in Ontario. These are the first FIT rates proposed anywhere in North America that are on par with the rates in Germany and Spain. Those countries dominate the solar industry and the FIT rates there are a huge reason why. From what it looks like, Ontario is going to follow suit, and the best part is, these new FIT Rates are only part of what the government has planned. There’s a good article about this on Cleantech.com, “Ontario casts green shadow on U.S.“, which was written before these proposed rates were released.
Posted in Energy, Solar, Solar Industry, Solar Investment, Solar Politics |
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8 Responses to “New Ontario Feed-In Tariff Rates for Solar Energy”
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Natalee Environment Says:
March 14th, 2009 at 1:00 amOnce the new rating scheme is in place, it should be equally easy to compare tariffs on environmental grounds. Natalee Environment
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Jon E Worren Says:
March 14th, 2009 at 12:01 pmGreat summary of the proposed new FITs Nic! Hopefully the tariffs with survive the stakeholder consultations over the next 6-7 week and if they do we have a very attractive solar market in Ontario! The one remaining challenge when the FIT is in place, is simply to educate consumers and businesses alike that they can in fact make money on investing in renewable energy. At the moment the public interest is relatively low and apart from Tyler Hamilton the general press is not paying attention. Big marketing job for the industry!
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Solar Panels Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 6:22 amThanks, This Website very useful and more informative for Solar Energy.Thanks again for making this public. ..
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EnergyChina Says:
April 14th, 2009 at 4:56 amAnyway, solar will boom. And nowadays more incentives are planned.
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Len Gould Says:
April 27th, 2009 at 10:52 amQuestion. These vary favourable feed-in tarrif rates in Ontario. Do they apply to ALL the power generated by a solar PV installation, or just to the amount in excess of local consumption? If not all, exactly what formula?
Thanks. Excellent product. Hoping to install it as soon as available.
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Niraj Chandra Says:
May 8th, 2009 at 11:45 amThis is very good information.
I am very excited about Ontario’s Feed-In-Tariffs but this excitement is not widely shared. I’ve written about it at:
http://www.wecanadians.com.
We need more public awareness about Feed-In-Tariffs. -
Laszlo Nyagai Says:
May 28th, 2009 at 9:57 pmHi MR Eric Morgan.
We looki to open solar farm.
Can you helf to me, what is the 10 MW , PRICE.We looking the by your systems with the trucking system.
Please write to me.
Good luck your solar systems.
Regards Laszlo.
905 737 0352. -
Istvan Imre Says:
September 1st, 2009 at 10:19 amHi Eric,
I have recently read about the new feed-in tariffs and I must say I am pleasantly surprised. I visited Germany and Austria 4 years ago and I saw the extent of renewable energy generation there.
I live in Sault Ste. Marie and I am thinking of opening a solar power generation business. There is already a company, The Pod Generating Group that will open here several farms having a total output of 60 MW.
I was wondering whether you could give me some pointers.
I would like to know what is the approximate price of a 10 MW solar farm and what is the expected land area that the panels will occupy?
With a project of this size, financing is, of course, an essential part. Do you know of any financing options with the government or perhaps the banking industry that would offer funds to start up such a business? On the Go solar site I saw 0% loans mentioned but that was for home systems.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you in advance,
Istvan







