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Lee's avatar

Useful life - older solar farms in CA are replacing panels after 10-12 years. They still work, but they degrade and produce less. The solar farm cannot meet its power purchase agreement minimums and must replace the degrading panels. They can’t just add more because it violates the terms of their interconnection. The “old” ones are scrapped, of course.

Capacity factor - high time someone looked at capacity factor on a more granular level. State by state is interesting. I get a good laugh out of NY thinking they can rely on solar. Too far north and it snows. It is the minimums that count.

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Fred Behringer's avatar

A couple thoughts. LCOE is extremely misleading and should be phased out of the discussion - as EBB has pointed out it's the total system cost. Second, solar is highly geography dependent for a number of reasons (among them amount of sunshine, environmental impact), so overall costs need to take this into account and will differ significantly across the country. I'm sensitive to this because I live in CT where solar farms are consuming forests and farmland.

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