What is rooftop solar power worth to homeowners in Honolulu?
In recent years, a cocktail of high electricity bills, generous government incentives and increasingly cheap photovoltaic panels have made the shift to solar so appealing that top electricity executives in the islands acknowledge that homeowners who can afford rooftop systems should probably buy them.
All of the green talk aside, many homeowners who have bought rooftop solar systems did so at least partly to save money. After all, we live in the state with in the nation.
So, if installing solar systems is a money saver for Hawaii homeowners, how do those聽systems affect the value of the homes they are installed on?
Sherilyn Wee, of the University of Hawaii鈥檚 Economic Research Organization鈥檚 Energy Policy and Planning Group, decided to calculate this 鈥渟olar premium鈥 for homes on Oahu.
The researcher and Ph.D. candidate examined a very large random sampling of 13 years of Honolulu Board of Realtors data on single-family home sales. She then cross-referenced that information with data on solar permits and calculated that rooftop solar systems increased the resale value of the median single-family homes between 2000 and 2013 by .
During the period Wee studied, the real price for the median non-solar home was $630,000 in 2013 dollars. Add a solar system on that median home and you get an increase of $34,000 in value.
The 5.4 percent premium is higher 鈥斅爄n many cases, far higher 鈥 than elsewhere. A U.S. Department of Energy in eight states between 2002 and 2013 concluded that home-buyers paid a typical solar premium of about $15,000 premium.
Why do solar customers in Hawaii get more than double the return on their investment in a rooftop system?
The solar premium in the islands is far higher because electricity rates have been two to four times mainland rates and homes are more costly, Wee explained.
So on the one hand, solar benefits from its competition with much higher electricity prices聽in the islands, and the cost of installing a system accounts for a smaller percentage of the overall cost of a home.
A 2011 study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research looked at solar鈥檚 impact on home values in San Diego and Sacramento. The report, entitled, , calculated a 3.5 percent boost in home values there.
In California, where home values are lower than in Hawaii and where there is also plenty of rooftop solar, Wee said the solar premium on home values tends to be in the 3 percent to 4 percent range. The median home price in 聽while it is聽聽in the islands, according to the online real estate data site, Zillow.聽The typical single-family home in Honolulu goes for $730,000.
Great Value聽In Honolulu
There are other reasons why rooftop solar is worth more to homeowners here. Residents of Honolulu have faced periodic obstacles to installing solar, especially in recent years when Hawaiian Electric cited overburdened circuits and other pressure on the electric system to justify big slowdowns in the permitting process.
In the last year, HECO has made substantial progress in reducing the backlog of solar applications 鈥斅爐he company says the vast majority are now resolved in 60 days or less.
鈥淲e lost the (net-metering) program. That throws a monkey wrench into a lot of things. We don鈥檛 have a true definition of the value of solar.鈥 鈥 Drew Bradley of REC Solar
But the Public Utilities Commission dealt a blow to the rapid expansion of solar when it announced in October that it would end net metering for future customers. Net metering has been a popular program among homeowners because it allows people with rooftop solar聽to sell the energy they generate to the power company at retail rates.
The聽high rates they received helped聽many people who purchased聽solar systems to pay them off in as little as three to five years.
With that option finished 鈥 other than for the people who already had rooftop systems or who had applications in by聽the cut-off date of October 12 鈥 various electricity experts say that the numbers remain favorable for the shift to solar. They just aren’t as favorable as before.
It now takes more years of paying the equivalent of customers’聽old聽utility聽bills to cover the costs of a聽solar system.
What the industry is really trying to figure out is how much a permitted solar system is really worth, said Drew Bradley, the Hawaii regional manager of REC Solar. 鈥淲e lost the (net-metering) program,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat throws a monkey wrench into a lot of things. We don鈥檛 have a true definition of the value of solar.鈥
Rooftop solar customers and the industry face other challenges, particularly about the durability of federal and state tax credits that add up to聽65 percent of the cost of a system. Gov. David Ige recently said in a recent interview with Civil Beat that he expected a reduction in such supports since the industry is thriving.
Wee acknowledged聽the changing terrain. 鈥淭he payback period聽is now significantly slower, but it is still a great investment,鈥 she said.
That’s especially true for people who continue to benefit from聽net metering.
Honolulu realtor David Nash said that with the end of net metering, the homes with grandfathered-in agreements and paid-off solar systems have a special selling point. 鈥淣ow if you sell a home that has a $17 monthly (electric utility) bill, that is forever; you have something now that nobody else can have,鈥 he said.
That should mean a bigger home聽value boost for owners of such homes. Nash spoke of a large home in Lanikai whose owner聽once had monthly bills in the $500 to $600 range, but who is聽instead paying the small minimum monthly fee to HECO 鈥 resulting in thousands of dollars in savings each year.
Solar systems can play a different, less obvious role for aspiring homeowners, Nash explained.
In cases where a potential buyer might not be able to get a large enough mortgage to buy a lower-end home, the realtor said聽a lender can calculate in the fact that a home has a paid-off solar system to show that the borrower can afford a higher mortgage.
And, in such cases, there is no risk of the sort of price volatility that HECO customers have endured in recent years.
鈥淐ertainly it would be to the realtor鈥檚 advantage to make sure the appraiser knows there are offsets,鈥 Nash said.
Read our ongoing report on Hawaii鈥檚 high cost of living and the search for what can be done about it.
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