Pros
This is based on my local utility SDG&E. SDG&E considers peak summer rates to be in effect from June 1 - October 31, 4pm - 9pm. Let's call this 150 days of peak summer rates with a peak/off-peak differential of $0.30/kWh. Assume I have a SolarEdge inverter with one LG Chem battery. The LG Chem battery is rated at 9.8 kWh, however only 9.3 kWh is usable.
Here's the math to calculate the maximum potential summer savings:
= usable battery energy x savings differential x # days
= 9.3 kWh x $0.30/kWh x 150 days
= $418.50 annual savings in year 1
Future Savings
= $292 annual savings in year 10 if battery degrades 70% and rate differential remains the same
= $670 annual savings in year 10 if battery degrades 80% and rate differential increases to $0.60/kWh
- Will power my entire house during a utility outage..............(sorry this is a myth)
- Will save HUGE money due to high utility time-of-use rates...............(sorry again, this is also a myth)
- Very expensive
- Will never pay for itself if used to offset high time-of-use rates
- You can't power your entire house during a blackout. You can't run your air conditioning, do laundry, cook a meal, etc. A backup loads subpanel must be installed with only a few circuits. Why? Because your expensive battery only has 9.3 kWh of usable energy, when brand new, and will degrade substantially over time.
This is based on my local utility SDG&E. SDG&E considers peak summer rates to be in effect from June 1 - October 31, 4pm - 9pm. Let's call this 150 days of peak summer rates with a peak/off-peak differential of $0.30/kWh. Assume I have a SolarEdge inverter with one LG Chem battery. The LG Chem battery is rated at 9.8 kWh, however only 9.3 kWh is usable.
Here's the math to calculate the maximum potential summer savings:
= usable battery energy x savings differential x # days
= 9.3 kWh x $0.30/kWh x 150 days
= $418.50 annual savings in year 1
Future Savings
= $292 annual savings in year 10 if battery degrades 70% and rate differential remains the same
= $670 annual savings in year 10 if battery degrades 80% and rate differential increases to $0.60/kWh
- Winter time-of-use differential is only $0.02/kWh. You probably don't want to daily cycle your battery for 7 months to save less than $0.20/day.
- LG Chem warranty states that the battery will retain at least 60% of nominal energy for 10 years. Unlike solar panels, it does not state if this is linear degradation. Meaning you could lose 10% in the 1st year. We just don't know.
- Rates will definitely go up over time, but it will be across the board. Therefore the summer differential may increase or just stay the same.
- The local incentives in CA reduce the cost of this system, including a backup loads subpanel, from an estimated $12,000 to $6,500. However if you finance this with HERO, your total costs including interest will be around $10,000.
- At the end of your warranty, a new replacement battery is not eligible for any incentives. Don't count on huge price reductions. In fact Tesla announced a price increase in 2018 for the PowerWall, which was quickly matched by LG Chem.
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