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1.3m Aussie households using green energy: Solar panels have to be moved to catch proper sunlight

byCustoms Today Report
26/01/2015
in World Business
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SYDNEY: The direction of millions of solar panels installed in Australian houses without proper planning will have to be changed to catch the afternoon sun.

Most panels face north, meaning they catch all-day sun – but that does not ease the pressure at peak afternoon times, when the setting sun roasts Sydney from the west and millions of families switch on the airconditioning and other appliances all at once.

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Families whose panels face north must reorient them to face west or face extra costs for network services under a new “cost-reflective pricing” regime set to start in 2017.

The new tariffs – guaranteed to spark outrage in Sydney’s baking fringes – have been quietly imposed after research for the Australian Energy Markets Commission claimed the 1.3 million Australian households with solar panels, including 300,000 in NSW are currently ‘underpaying’ for network services by about $120 a year.

West-facing solar panels produce more power during peaks, better alleviating pressure on the network.

AEMC chief Paul Smith admitted it should have required all panels to face west in the first place. “To some degree we did miss that boat with tariffs that were not necessarily the right structure,” he said.

The Energy Networks Association claims without tariff reform, solar panel subsidies could rise to $655 per year by 2035, when up to seven million homes will have solar systems.

Households whose panels face north must reorient them to face west or face extra costs for network services under a new “cost-reflective pricing” regime that starts in 2017,

The new tariffs have been imposed after research for the Australian Energy Markets Commission showed the 1.3 million Australian households with solar panels – including 300,000 in NSW – are currently underpaying for network services by about $120 a year.

Solar panels pointed west produce more power during periods of peak demand and are therefore better at alleviating pressure on the network.

Paul Smith, the CEO of AEMC, said the tariffs designed to encourage solar panel installation had failed to require a westerly ­orientation.

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