To illustrate the financial and environmental feasibility, let’s consider a 100 kW rooftop solar PV installation for a mid-sized commercial facility in the U.S.:
| Parameter | Typical Value (2025 Estimates) | Notes |
| System Size | 100 kW DC | Standard commercial setup |
| Average Installed Cost | $180,000 – $250,000 | Around $1.80–$2.50 per watt (SEIA 2025 data) |
| Federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) | 30 % | Reduces upfront cost to ≈ $126,000–$175,000 |
| Annual Electricity Generation | 140,000 – 160,000 kWh | Depends on solar irradiance (4–5 peak sun hours/day) |
| Annual Utility Savings | $18,000 – $24,000 | Based on $0.13–$0.15 per kWh rates |
| Simple Payback Period | 6 – 8 years | After incentives; shorter in high-rate regions |
| System Lifespan | 25 – 30 years | Panels typically warrantied for 25 yrs |
| Estimated IRR (Internal Rate of Return) | 9 % – 14 % | Comparable or better than many low-risk investments |
| Annual CO₂ Offset | ≈ 90–110 metric tons | Equivalent to removing ~25 cars/year |
Locations with higher electricity costs (California, New York, Hawaii) or strong state incentives (e.g., Illinois SREC, Massachusetts SMART) can shorten the payback to 5 years or less.
When coupled with battery storage, total investment rises 20–30 %, but peak-shaving savings and energy resilience often justify the added cost, especially for critical operations.
Explore Cost-Saving Models
Installing renewable systems can be expensive upfront, but new financing models make it easier.
One of the best options is a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA).
Here’s how it works:
- A third-party company installs and owns the system.
- Your business buys the energy it produces at a fixed, lower rate.
- You get clean power without paying large upfront costs.
Alternative Models
| Model | Ownership | Upfront Cost | Maintenance | Typical Users |
| Direct Purchase | Business | High | In-house | Large corporations |
| Lease | Third party | Medium | Shared | Retail chains |
| Energy-as-a-Service | Provider | Low | Provider | SMEs/startups |
These models stabilize long-term energy costs and protect against fossil-fuel price volatility—a growing competitive advantage in uncertain energy markets.
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