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Analysis: Solar Cost-Shift and Cross-Subsidy Effects #10

@BenjaminWatts

Description

@BenjaminWatts

Analysis: Solar Cost-Shift and Cross-Subsidy Effects

Summary

Source: LinkedIn comments from Lewis Bowick (Energy Systems Consultant at Energy Systems Catapult)
Priority: High
Type: Research & Analysis
Estimated Effort: 2-3 weeks

Problem

Lewis Bowick identified a critical gap in understanding of solar economics: the implicit cross-subsidy of solar through volume-based charges. He argues that domestic solar creates a "cost-shift from behind-the-meter generation" where PV owners bypass local energy grid charges and taxes, with the costs landing on other bill payers. This represents a sophisticated economic analysis that challenges mainstream assumptions about solar benefits.

Current Status

  • Solar economics typically analyzed at household level without considering system-wide effects
  • Cross-subsidy effects through volume-based charges not well understood
  • LCOE comparisons between rooftop and grid-scale solar need deeper analysis
  • Tariff structure implications for distributed generation not fully explored
  • "Vanishingly little awareness" of these effects even within energy professions

Tasks

Economic Analysis

  1. Cost-Shift Mechanism Analysis

    • Analyze how domestic solar bypasses local energy grid charges
    • Quantify the cross-subsidy effect on other bill payers
    • Model the "artificial cost shift effect" on solar economics
    • Calculate true societal costs vs. individual household savings
  2. LCOE Comparison Study

    • Compare rooftop solar LCOE (122/MWh BEIS estimates) with grid-scale solar
    • Analyze why small-scale solar is "2-3x higher" than grid-scale
    • Assess whether rooftop solar would be "uneconomic" without cost-shifting
    • Include international comparisons and best practices
  3. Tariff Structure Impact Analysis

    • Analyze Ofgem policies around tariff structures
    • Model impact of volume-based vs. standing charge recovery
    • Assess political constraints on "rational" tariff design
    • Explore alternative tariff structures and their implications

Policy and Market Analysis

  1. System-Wide Impact Assessment

    • Analyze impact on electrification costs
    • Assess effects on industrial competitiveness
    • Evaluate implications for public support for net zero
    • Model long-term economic consequences
  2. Alternative Policy Framework

    • Explore policy options to address cost-shifting
    • Analyze international approaches to distributed generation pricing
    • Assess potential for network charging reform
    • Evaluate impact of different policy approaches

Content Integration

  1. Chapter Updates and New Content
    • Enhance existing solar content with cost-shift analysis
    • Add dedicated section on cross-subsidy effects
    • Include analysis of tariff structure implications
    • Connect to broader energy policy and market design discussions

Deliverables

  • Comprehensive analysis of solar cost-shift mechanisms
  • Economic modeling of cross-subsidy effects
  • LCOE comparison study with system-wide perspective
  • Policy recommendations for addressing cost-shifting
  • Updated solar content with sophisticated economic analysis
  • Expert perspective integration from Lewis Bowick

Labels

solar-economics, cost-analysis, cross-subsidy, tariff-structure, high-priority

Assignee

@BenjaminWatts

Timeline

3 weeks from issue creation

Related

  • Links to existing solar and renewable energy content
  • Connects to electricity pricing and market design discussions
  • May relate to grid modernization and network charging analysis

Notes

This addresses sophisticated feedback from an Energy Systems Catapult consultant who identified a critical gap in solar economic analysis. The cost-shift mechanism represents a fundamental challenge to conventional solar deployment assumptions and requires deep economic analysis to understand its implications for energy policy and market design.

Lewis Bowick's analysis suggests that domestic solar may create perverse economic incentives that could undermine broader decarbonization goals, making this a high-priority issue for comprehensive analysis.

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Labels

analysisEconomic or technical analysis requiredhigh-priorityHigh priority items requiring immediate attention

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