4.7 Article

Residential rooftop solar demand in the US and the impact of net energy metering and electricity prices

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 118, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2022.106491

Keywords

Electricity demand; Rooftop solar; Econometrics; Net energy metering

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We use panel data to analyze the demand for residential rooftop solar and the impact of net energy metering compensation. Our findings indicate that rooftop solar demand is highly price elastic and income elastic. We also find that there is a strong substitution effect between rooftop solar and utility-provided electricity due to poor residential rate design. Net energy metering has a significant positive impact on the demand for residential rooftop solar, leading to an increase in demand and bypassing of utility-supplied electricity.
We use a panel dataset of residential rooftop solar adoption for 27 states from 2008 to 2018 to estimate demand for rooftop solar and the impact of net energy metering compensation. We find demand is highly price elastic and that income is elastic as well. We find a large cross-price effect with respect to residential electricity price indicating that rooftop solar is a strong substitute for utility-provided electricity driven, in part, by poor resi-dential rate design that primarily recovers fixed system costs through volumetric charges. We find that net en-ergy metering has a large positive impact on the demand for residential rooftop solar, resulting in at least doubling of demand and in uneconomic customer bypass of utility-supplied electricity, as net energy metering not a market-based compensation rate. Our analysis lends support to ongoing state policy efforts to reform net energy metering and to improve electricity rate design.

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