After installing solar panels on a building, there may be times when the amount of electricity being generated is higher than consumption. Unless the building with the PV array has a battery system or another form of energy storage, surplus power is sent to the grid. You normally get credit for sending your extra kilowatt-hours to the grid, and it appears on your next power bill. However, the way in which this credit is calculated can vary.
Depending on local regulations and how your electricity provider decides to manage surplus solar power, there are three possibilities:
Here we will discuss the differences between net metering and solar buyback programs, and how they affect the savings achieved by a solar panel system.
Net metering is exactly what its name implies: Each kilowatt-hour consumed from the grid is added to your monthly power bill, and each kilowatt-hour generated by solar panels and supplied to the grid is subtracted at full retail price.
Your building may have billing periods where solar generation is higher than consumption, and you end up with a positive balance. When this happens, the way in which credits are handled depends on your electric company.
In many parts of the US, electric companies give you net metering until the point where generation is equal to consumption. Any surplus generation beyond this point is credited at a lower price, generally the “avoided cost rate”. For example, if your electricity provider purchases energy from local power plants at 8 cents/kWh, you also get that rate for any solar kilowatt-hours that exceed your monthly consumption.
There are very few power companies who actually pay you when onsite solar generation exceeds consumption. Normally, your credit will be rolled over to the next month, until building consumption is higher than solar generation and you have a chance to use it. Some electric companies will let you accumulate credit without limit, others will reset your balance to zero once per year, and a few of them may offer an annual payment at their avoided cost per kWh.
Not all electricity providers offer net metering at full retail price. Many of them offer a solar buyback program, where surplus electricity from solar panels is measured independently from consumption. In this case, you are charged the retail price for consumption, and are paid a reduced tariff for surplus generation. Solar buyback tariffs are also known as feed-in tariffs.
The difference can be demonstrated using the same example as above, where a building has a grid consumption of 10,000 kWh and a surplus generation of 2,500 kWh. With net metering, you are charged for the net consumption of 7,500 kWh, but the calculation procedure changes with a solar buyback tariff:
For example, if the kWh price is 20 cents/kWh and the solar buyback tariff is 12 cents/kWh, you are charged $2,000 and get a credit of $300. In this case the power bill decreases to $1,700, and you are not saving the full value of the 2,500 kWh exported to the grid.
Even with a reduced feed-in tariff, there may be cases where the power bill credit is higher than the consumption charge. Just like with net metering, the way in which this credit is managed depends on the electricity provider, but cash payments are very rare. Generally, credits are rolled over to the next month until you consume them. Some companies offer unlimited rollover, while others reset your balance to zero once per year.
Solar power systems have a higher ROI when you have access to net metering, since all kilowatt-hours are credited at their full value. On the other hand, when you have a lower solar buyback tariff, monthly savings are decreased. However, this only affects you if a large fraction of your solar generation is exported to the grid. Regardless of how surplus energy is credited, you always save the full value of the solar kilowatt-hours that are used onsite.