In 2001 the federal government created a program to incentivise the shift to renewable energy by 2030 (and reduceCO2-e emissions)
Most solar incentives are in the form of “renewable energy certificates” (RECs) that are earned by solar installations, and then traded in an open market
The value (i.e. $ face value of certificates) is created by the imbalance between:
The type of certificates relevant for solar in Victoria include:
STCs are issued with qualifying solar power systems and solar panels and can be redeemed for a dollar value that is deducted from the cost of the solar system. The value of an STC at any one time depends on market conditions.
Created on a yearly, quarterly or monthly basis throughout the lifetime of the station until the RET ends in 2030.
This is where things get interesting:
Once created, certificates can be sold to energy retailers who have a liability under the program to surrender a certain number of certificates each year.
They are electronic certificates:
The Victorian Energy Upgrades (VEU) program is a market-based scheme which:
Driving innovations and investment in businesses that supply goods and services that deliver energy reductions.
Traditionally LGC’s are with commercial solar proposals over 100 kW:
All electricity generated from the date your system receives accreditation approval by the Clean Energy Regulator and meets electricity demand - either used onsite, fed into a storage device or exported to the electricity grid - is eligible to claim LGCs.
VEECs can be offered with any sized PV system but usually over 100 kW:
The number of VEECs that a given activity is able to create depends on the amount of greenhouse gas emissions reduction the activity will cause as provided for in the Victorian Energy Upgrades Specifications 2018 (for 'deemed activities') and the Victorian Energy Efficiency Target (Project-Based Activities) Regulations 2017 (PDF) (for activities undertaken using project-based activity methods).
To qualify for VEEC’s the following has to occur:
There are many abatement methods or ‘prescribed activities’ in the VEU program. Undertaking project based activities (PBA) using measurement and verification (M&V) is an eligible prescribed activity under the PBA Regulations.
After the installation has been completed:
As PBA M&V allows many different types of abatement technologies and energy reduction techniques, we do not provide a VEEC calculator for this purpose.
We will assume the project size is 225 kW of solar:
Going forward with the project:
If you’d like to see more of what Greenwood Solutions get up to in the real world of renewable energy, solar, battery storage and grid protection check out our industry and commercial pages:
https://www.greenwoodsolutions.com.au/industry
https://www.greenwoodsolutions.com.au/commercial
https://www.greenwoodsolutions.com.au/news
https://www.greenwoodsolutions.com.au/commercial/customer-stories
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