[RE-wrenches] Fwd: Berkeley Lab Study Finds that Solar Photovoltaic Systems Boost the Sales Price of California Homes

Dave Click daveclick at fsec.ucf.edu
Wed May 4 07:15:03 PDT 2011


All, just noticed that this email hadn't gone through to the wrench 
list. Good follow-up to our March discussion (subject line: Value of PV 
system to a home).

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: 	Berkeley Lab Study Finds that Solar Photovoltaic Systems Boost 
the Sales Price of California Homes
Date: 	Thu, 21 Apr 2011 09:36:58 -0700
From: 	Ryan Wiser <rhwiser at lbl.gov>
To: 	nrel at dante.lbl.gov



Dear Colleague:

We are pleased to announce the completion of a new Berkeley Lab report: 
"An Analysis of the Effects of Residential Photovoltaic Energy Systems 
on Home Sales Prices in California."

An increasing number of homes with photovoltaic (PV) energy systems have 
sold in the U.S., yet relatively little research exists that estimates 
the impacts of those PV systems on home sales prices.A clearer 
understanding of these effects might influence the decisions of 
homeowners considering installing PV on their home or selling their home 
with PV already installed, of home buyers considering purchasing a home 
with PV already installed, and of new home builders considering 
installing PV on their production homes.

This research analyzes nearly 2000 California homes that have sold with 
PV installed.Across a large number of model specifications and 
robustness tests, the analysis finds strong evidence that California 
homes with PV systems have sold for a premium over comparable homes 
without PV systems.

Specifically, some of the key findings from the analysis include:

    *

      The average home sales price increases from PV across the full
      sample of homes in the dataset ranges from approximately $3.9 to
      $6.4 per installed watt (DC) of PV.

    *

      Most models coalesce near an average effect of $5.5/watt, which
      corresponds to a home sales price premium of approximately $17,000
      for a relatively new 3,100 watt PV system (the average size of PV
      systems in the study).

    *

      These average sales price premiums appear to be comparable to the
      investment that homeowners have made to install PV systems in
      California, and homeowners with PV also benefit from electricity
      cost savings after PV system installation and prior to home sale.

    *

      When expressed as a ratio of the sales price premium to estimated
      annual electricity cost savings associated with PV, an average
      ratio of 14:1 to 22:1 can be calculated; these results are
      consistent with those of the more-extensive existing literature on
      the impact of energy efficiency on home sales prices.

    *

      The analysis finds that sales price premiums decline as PV systems
      age.

    *

      When the data are split between new and existing homes, a large
      disparity in premiums is discovered: the research finds that new
      homes with PV in California have demonstrated average premiums of
      $2.3-2.6/watt, while the average premium for existing homes with
      PV has been more than $6/watt.

    *

      The research suggests several possible reasons for the lower
      premium for new homes, including that new home builders may also
      gain value from PV as a market differentiator, and may therefore
      have been willing to accept a lower premium in return for faster
      sales velocity.

The full report can be downloaded from:

http://eetd.lbl.gov/ea/emp/reports/lbnl-4476e.pdf

A 2-page summary of the report's key findings can be found at:

http://eetd.lbl.gov/ea/emp/reports/lbnl-4476e-rs.pdf

We appreciate the funding and support of the U.S. Department of Energy's 
Solar Energy Technologies Program, the National Renewable Energy 
Laboratory, and the Clean Energy States Alliance, and we apologize in 
advance for any cross-postings.


All the best,

Ryan Wiser, Ben Hoen, and Peter Cappers

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

PS - Attached below is a press announcement that is being distributed on 
this work.


Media contact:

Allan Chen (510) 486-4210, a_chen at lbl.gov <mailto:a_chen at lbl.gov>


Technical contacts:

Ryan Wiser, (510) 486-5474, rhwiser at lbl.gov <mailto:rhwiser at lbl.gov>,

Ben Hoen, (845) 758-1896, bhoen at lbl.gov <mailto:bhoen at lbl.gov>

*New Berkeley Lab Study Finds that Residential Solar Photovoltaic 
Systems Boost the Sales Price of California Homes *

*Berkeley, CA--*New research by the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) 
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory finds strong evidence that homes 
with solar photovoltaic (PV) systems sell for a premium over homes 
without solar systems."We find compelling evidence that solar PV systems 
in California have boosted home sales prices," says Ben Hoen, the lead 
researcher on the study and a Principal Research Associate at Berkeley 
Lab. "These average sales price premiums appear to be comparable with 
the average investment that homeowners have made to install PV systems 
in California, and of course homeowners also benefit from energy bill 
savings after PV system installation and prior to home sale."

The research finds that homes with PV in California have sold for a 
premium, expressed in dollars per watt of installed PV, of approximately 
$3.9 to $6.4/watt.This corresponds to an average home sales price 
premium of approximately $17,000 for a relatively new 3,100 watt PV 
system (the average size of PV systems in the Berkeley Lab dataset), and 
compares to an average investment that homeowners have made to install 
PV systems in California of approximately $5/W over the 2001-2009 period.

"This is a sizable effect," says co-author and Staff Scientist Ryan 
Wiser of Berkeley Lab."This research might influence the decisions of 
homeowners considering installing a PV system and of home buyers 
considering buying a home with PV already installed. Even new home 
builders that are contemplating PV as a component of their homes can 
benefit from this research."

Approximately 2,100 megawatts (MW) of grid-connected solar PV have been 
installed in the U.S.California has been and continues to be the 
country's largest market for PV, with nearly 1,000 MW of installed 
capacity.California is also approaching 100,000 individual PV systems 
installed, more than 90% of which are residential.Though an increasing 
number of homes with PV systems have sold, relatively little research 
has been performed to estimate the impacts of those PV systems on home 
sales prices.

The Berkeley Lab research is the first to empirically explore the 
existence and magnitude of residential PV sales price impacts across a 
large number of homes and over a wide geographic area.The research 
analyzed a dataset of more than 72,000 California homes that sold from 
2000 through mid-2009, approximately 2,000 of which had a PV system at 
the time of sale."This is the most comprehensive and data-rich analysis 
to date of the potential influence of PV systems on home sales prices," 
says co-author and San Diego State University Economics Department Chair 
Mark Thayer.

The research controlled for a large number of factors that might 
influence results, such as housing market fluctuations, neighborhood 
effects, the age of the home, and the size of the home and the parcel on 
which it was located.The resulting premiums associated with PV systems 
were consistent across a large number of model specifications and 
robustness tests.

The research also shows that, as PV systems age, the premium enjoyed at 
the time of home sale decreases.Additionally, existing homes with PV 
systems are found to have commanded a larger sales price premium than 
new homes with similarly sized PV systems.

"One reason for the disparity between existing and new homes with PV 
might be that new home builders also gain value from PV as a market 
differentiator that speeds the home sales process, a factor not analyzed 
in the Berkeley Lab study," says co-author and Berkeley Lab Principle 
Scientific Engineering Associate Peter Cappers. "More research is 
warranted to better understand these and related impacts."

==================================================================

This work was supported by the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable 
Energy (Solar Energy Technologies Program) of the U.S. Department of 
Energy, by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and by the Clean 
Energy States Alliance.

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory addresses the world's most 
urgent scientific challenges by advancing sustainable energy, protecting 
human health, creating new materials, and revealing the origin and fate 
of the universe. Founded in 1931, Berkeley Lab's scientific expertise 
has been recognized with 12 Nobel prizes. The University of California 
manages Berkeley Lab for the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of 
Science. For more, visit www.lbl.gov <http://www.lbl.gov/>.

_Additional Information_

The report, "An Analysis of the Effects of Residential Photovoltaic 
Energy Systems on Home Sales Prices in California," can be downloaded from:

http://eetd.lbl.gov/ea/emp/reports/lbnl-4476e.pdf

A 2-page summary of the report's key findings can be found at:

http://eetd.lbl.gov/ea/emp/reports/lbnl-4476e-rs.pdf

For more information about DOE's Solar Energy Technologies Program, see 
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/solar/

For more information about the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, see 
http://www.nrel.gov/

For more information about the Clean Energy States Alliance, see 
http://www.cleanenergystates.org/

For more information on the report, contact Ben Hoen (bhoen at lbl.gov, 
845-758-1896) or Ryan Wiser (rhwiser at lbl.gov, 510-486-5474).

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