SEPA Utility Solar Rankings Report Shows Utilities Grew 100% in 2010

By Solarpower.com, PRNE
Monday, June 13, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO, June 14, 2011 -


Consisting of America’s electric utilities and solar companies,
Solar Electric Power Association (SEPA) has released its latest
report in which its research has revealed that utilities are
increasingly expanding their solar power generation portfolios and
astonishingly most of these solar instalments are materializing
outside of California.

href="www.solarelectricpower.org/solar-tools/sepa-utility-solar-rankings.aspx">
SEPA’s Fourth Annual Top 10 Utility Solar Rankings that
analyzes utility solar electricity markets in the United States
found that in 2010, utility integrated solar grew 100% from 2009.
Of the Top 10 ranked utilities, seven of which are from outside of
California contributed 561 MW of solar electric capacity. Actually,
SEPA found that 63% of the utilities from outside of California are
the largest percentage accounted. In 2010, thirty utilities
reported owning 140 MW of solar which is a drastic 300% increase
from 2009.

SEPA’s annual rankings measure a utility’s recently installed href="solarpower.com/">solar power and include
photovoltaic and concentrating solar power technologies that were
incorporated between January 1 and December 31, 2010. The rankings
are categorized into ‘Solar Megawatts’ which measures a utility’s
total solar capacities and ‘Solar Watts-per-Customer (w/c)’ which
regulates solar capacity by the size of the utility.

Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) which put in a further 157
MW of solar power capacity in 2010 topped the Solar Megawatt
ranking whilst its competitor Florida Power & Light Company
secured a second place with 82 MW of added solar capacity. The
third spot was held by the New Jersey’s Public Service Electric
& Gas Co. (PSEG), which added 75 MW of solar capacity in
2010.

The Solar Watts-per-Customer (w/c) was topped by California’s
Silicon Valley Power by adding 40-watts per customer. Just 5 watts
behind Silicon Valley Power was runner up Public Service Electric
& Gas Co. (PSEG) at 35.2-watts per customer. The competition
was tight for the third spot with Hawaiian Electric Company Inc.
snatching it with 33.2-watts per customer.

SEPA’s report concluded that this year’s Top 10 not only
portrays a rapid rise in the solar instalments on utility grids but
a inclination towards utility-led initiatives; the reason behind
the expansion of the solar market. Until a few years ago, the solar
utilities installed were customer dominated, net metered systems.
In 2010, the prominence shifted to large, centralized plants and
utility-owned projects.

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Michael Waters - SolarPower.com - PR Team - E:michaelw at wn.com - T:+1-312-235-2275

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