kWh to kWh/kWp?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • bernard
    Solar Fanatic
    • Oct 2014
    • 114

    #1

    kWh to kWh/kWp?

    I am a bit confused with this kWh and kWh/kWp units when it comes to PV panels.
    Are these two the same? If not how to convert one to another?

    Let's say I have a 4kW system, which annually generates 5000 kWh.
    How to convert these 5000 kWh to kWh/kWp?

    Thank you.
  • inetdog
    Super Moderator
    • May 2012
    • 9909

    #2
    Originally posted by bernard
    I am a bit confused with this kWh and kWh/kWp units when it comes to PV panels.
    Are these two the same? If not how to convert one to another?

    Let's say I have a 4kW system, which annually generates 5000 kWh.
    How to convert these 5000 kWh to kWh/kWp?

    Thank you.

    As I understand it, the units of kWp are really just the same as the units of kW, namely the power (rate of energy production) of the panels.
    All the p does is qualify it as the peak (highest) power value seen during operation.
    If the angle and other factors are optimal, the kWp will be related to the nominal STC or PTC kW of the panels, namely at specified temperature and with incident radiation of 1000w/m2.

    Now for any real world panel array, the actual kWp will be lower than the nominal panel power and if the panel angle is not optimal it will even be some constant factor lower than the nominal power.
    The kWh is the energy produced during one day, one year, or whatever, so the kWh divided by the kWp is primarily an indicator of how good the location is (equator versus high latitude) and what the local weather conditions do to reduce total output for a given set of panels.

    To convert your 5000 kWh per year to a kWh/kWp value you just need to know what the kWp of your array is.
    SunnyBoy 3000 US, 18 BP Solar 175B panels.

    Comment

    • bernard
      Solar Fanatic
      • Oct 2014
      • 114

      #3
      Originally posted by inetdog
      To convert your 5000 kWh per year to a kWh/kWp value you just need to know what the kWp of your array is.
      Thank you inetdog.
      I am not sure how to do that.

      Comment

      • HX_Guy
        Solar Fanatic
        • Apr 2014
        • 1002

        #4
        I've been wondering about the same thing recently...

        My SolarEdge page shows "This Month Performance [kWh/kWp] = 99.07". So that means that the system is producing 99.07kWh per kW of system power? Makes sense as 99.07 x 12.4kW = 1228.47 and that matches my "Energy this month" which shows 1.23MWh.

        Comment

        • bernard
          Solar Fanatic
          • Oct 2014
          • 114

          #5
          Thank you HX_Guy.

          But is kWh/kWp value always given for period of one month?
          What if you had an inverse case: you knew how much your PV array outputs per year, and you would like to convert that to kWh/kWp (per year?)?

          For the sake of simplicity let's say that your PV array outputs the same amount every months:
          1.23 MWh * 12 months = 14.76 MWh per year = 14760 kWh per year

          14760 MWh / 12.4 kW = 1190 kWh/kWp

          Did I get that right?

          Comment

          • DanKegel
            Banned
            • Sep 2014
            • 2093

            #6
            I am not an expert, but:

            If you have a 4kw array, then your kwp (kilowatts peak) is 4. kwp is the faceplate rating of your array.
            If it generates 5000 kwh per year, then kwh/kwp/year is 5000 / 4 = 1250, and kwh/kwp/month = 1250 / 12 = 104.

            For what it's worth, my kwh per kw per day averages out to 4.5 over the entire year here in sunny los angeles.
            And 4.5 kwh per kw per day is about 130 kwh per kw per month (because 4.5 * 30 days/month = 130).

            Comment

            • bernard
              Solar Fanatic
              • Oct 2014
              • 114

              #7
              Very nice reply.
              Thank you Dan.

              When you say that in Los Angeles you get 4.5 kWh/kWp/day, is that the same as: 4.5 kWh/m2/day
              (an average daily solar radiation per year)?

              Comment

              • DanKegel
                Banned
                • Sep 2014
                • 2093

                #8
                Originally posted by bernard
                When you say that in Los Angeles you get 4.5 kWh/kWp/day, is that the same as: 4.5 kWh/m2/day
                (an average daily solar radiation per year)?
                They're vaguely similar in that each is higher for more efficient panels and lower in shady or cloudy places or times, but the units are different, and the numbers are not identical.
                kWh/m2/day is "output in kWh per area per day".
                kWh/kWp/day is "effective hours of full sunshine per day".

                Roughly speaking, anyway.

                Comment

                • gregvet
                  Member
                  • Feb 2014
                  • 78

                  #9
                  Originally posted by bernard
                  Very nice reply.
                  Thank you Dan.

                  When you say that in Los Angeles you get 4.5 kWh/kWp/day, is that the same as: 4.5 kWh/m2/day
                  (an average daily solar radiation per year)?
                  The kWh/kW(DC) really is an efficiency number indicating the kWh produced for each kW DC of your system over a given period. For instance, I have 33-235 watt panels giving a 33*235 = 7.755 kW DC system. I generate an average of 45 kWh per day now in March. The efficiency is therefore 45 kWh/7.755 kW = 5.8 kWh/kW/day

                  Comment

                  Working...