The $5 million program is
immediately available in Dallas-Fort Worth, Irving-based TXU announced Tuesday.
TXU and SolarCity said their partnership "offers a full-service
solution" that includes system design, equipment, installation, insurance,
monitoring, warranty and a guaranteed amount of solar-power production.
Under the program, homeowners can either purchase the solar panels
outright, or pay roughly half upfront and sign a 20-year lease with no costs
beyond the initial payment and SolarCity retaining ownership.
With the
$1,000 discount, a homeowner could pay about $6,000 upfront for a 3-kilowatt
solar array under a 20-year lease with SolarCity, said Jonathan Bass, a
spokesman for the San Mateo, Calif.-based company.
After that payment,
"there's no monthly cost. ... It's one time and you're done," said Chip Deaver,
TXU Energy director of product innovation.
If anything breaks on the
solar array, SolarCity will "pay the full cost of the repairs," Deaver said.
Insurance will be provided at no cost, he said. In addition, SolarCity
will provide a "performance guarantee" for the 20-year period, promising a
specified level of power production from the panels.
If a homeowner
purchases a 3-kilowatt solar array outright, taking full ownership of it, the
gross cost of about $18,000 would be lowered to a net cost of about $11,500
after a 30 percent federal tax credit and the $1,000 discount, Bass said.
Cost savings on a monthly electric bill might be tens of dollars and
potentially $100 or more, depending on the electric rate a homeowner is paying,
the amount of electricity used, the size of the solar array installed and the
amount of solar energy produced.
A solar array might typically cut
monthly bills "somewhere around 30 percent,Our Polymax Plasticmold range includes all
commercial and specialist" Deaver said.
"In addition to the savings that
customers can see on their electric bills ... we pay for surplus power that is
put back on the grid," he said.
SolarCity will first determine whether a
home is a good candidate for solar power. For example, a south-facing home with
no trees shading the roof would be much better than a heavily shaded home with a
less-advantageous orientation.
The program is generally open to people
in Dallas-Fort Worth who are in the deregulated electricity market.
"For
now, we are focused on the area that is within driving distance of our
operations center in Irving, an approximately 60-mile radius," Bass said. "Based
on demand, we could expand further."
Customers who sign a 20-year lease
will "have several options" after it expires, Bass said.
"They can have
us remove the panels at no cost to them, can extend the lease in five-year
increments ... or upgrade to new technology," Bass said in an e-mail to the
Star-Telegram.
The expected life of a solar array is 30 to 40 years, he
said.Represent manufacturers of ceramicsink processing machinery,
The new TXU-SolarCity program is not dependent on rebates from Oncor
Electric Delivery, the chief transmission and distribution system serving North
Texas.
A previous TXU-SolarCity solar array leasing program,Basic
information about billabongboardshorts
including links. launched in February 2010, provided panels to about 200
customers before rebate money fizzled out.
About 5,000 other people who
expressed interest in the earlier program will be contacted to see whether they
want to participate in the new program, but there is no guarantee they will be
accepted.
By making solar more affordable with the $1,000 discount, more
homeowners can go solar, SolarCity Chief Executive Lyndon Rive said in a
statement Tuesday.
"Our solar offer is the best in the Texas competitive
marketplace,In addition to hydraulics fittings and halitosis, and as a full-service
solar provider,We carry top brand akidneystones for your home. we
provide homeowners with unmatched service," he said.
Through the
program, "we are making renewable energy even more affordable to our customers,"
TXU Energy Chief Executive Jim Burke said in a statement.
Commentaires
Il n'y a aucun commentaire sur cet article.