NREL recently published a paper which analyzes the three-year reliability of 1.7GW of solar installations all across the U.S. Here's the link. My apologies if this is old; the paper was presented at a conference in September, but I only just saw it today.
Some interesting takeaways:
Some interesting takeaways:
- 85% of all solar installations (including those with known defects or problems) produced at least 90% of the expected annual output.
- Installations in hotter climates degraded more than installations in more temperate regions, though the authors don't know if that's because of inverter degradation, panel degradation, or dust.
- The most common hardware problem was with the inverter (affecting 0.5% of systems), with underperforming modules affecting 0.1%.
- "Unauthorized shutdown" (i.e. some yahoo pulls the breaker) wasn't a common problem, but it happened enough to put in its own category.
- Hail damage was extremely rare, affecting 0.05% of systems.
- Underperformance due to storms was more likely to be due to power outages than direct damage to the solar panels.
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