The homeowner can easily see how much irradiance their roof receives, making it easy for installers to explain
their solar design decisions.
You may also be making suboptimal
solar design decisions or recommending the wrong financing option to your client.
Not exact matches
The development and deployment of major technologies potentially crucial to more sustainable energy — such as nuclear power, wind and
solar power, biomass conversion and transport infrastructure — are matters of systems
design requiring a mix of public and private
decision making.
CCSA is today releasing new model state legislation for community
solar and an updated Policy
Decision Matrix to guide policymakers in
designing community
solar programs tailored to their state.
The development of prototype
designs — for which the total cost of ownership has been analyzed and established with certainty — allows communities considering shared
solar projects to make informed
decisions.
Going
solar is a big
decision, so providing prospective customers with a concrete understanding of how it will put more money in their pockets is an essential first step in communicating the value of your
solar design — in addition to quantifying how much
solar energy the system will produce and exactly what their savings will be (both of which are easy to calculate if you use Aurora).
Even when you do see a
solar installation, you usually don't get to see everything that goes into it; you don't get to ask why they made different
design decisions.
Ultimately, the shift in prices of
solar technology carries major implications for
decision makers and policy designers, especially for the
design of tariff, fiscal, and other supporting policies.