Utility-Scale Solar 2013: An Empirical Analysis of Project Cost, Performance, and Pricing Trends in the United States

Other than the SEGS I-IX parabolic trough projects built in the 1980s, virtually no large-scale or "utility-scale" solar projects existed in the United States prior to 2007. By 2012 – just five years later – utility-scale had become the largest sec...

Solar Energy Technologies Office

May 13, 2015
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Other than the SEGS I-IX parabolic trough projects built in the 1980s, virtually no large-scale or "utility-scale" solar projects existed in the United States prior to 2007. By 2012 – just five years later – utility-scale had become the largest sector of the overall PV market in the United States, a distinction that was repeated in 2013 and is expected to continue for at least the next few years.

With this critical mass of new utility-scale projects now online and in some cases having operated for several years, the rapidly growing utility-scale sector is ripe for analysis. This report, the second in what is envisioned to be an ongoing annual series, meets this need through in-depth, annually updated, data-driven analysis of installed project costs or prices, as well as operating costs, capacity factors, and power purchase agreement ("PPA") prices from a large sample of utility-scale solar projects in the United States. Given its current dominance in the market, utility-scale PV also dominates much of this report, though more balanced coverage is expected in future editions as new CSP projects start to generate usable data.

DateSeptember 2014                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
TopicFinancing, Incentives and Market Analysis
SubprogramSoft Costs
AuthorLawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

 

https://emp.lbl.gov/publications/utility-scale-solar-2013-empirical