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Residential solar photovoltaic market stimulation: Japanese and Australian lessons for Canada

Parker, P.
2008
Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 12(7): 1944-1958, Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 12(7): 1944-1958
Solar energy policy; Photovoltaics; Residential market


Parker, P., (2008), "Residential solar photovoltaic market stimulation: Japanese and Australian lessons for Canada", Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 12(7): 1944-1958, Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 12(7): 1944-1958.
Abstract:
Canada is a leading electricity consumer, yet lags behind other industrial countries (14th out of 20 reporting IEA countries) in the installation of solar photovoltaic systems. The factors (environmental benefits, health benefits, network benefits, need for new production capacity, etc.) promoting solar or other renewable sources of electricity in other countries are also present in Canada, but effective policy mechanisms to stimulate Canada's photovoltaic industry are only starting to appear. Discussions of policy options focused initially on renewable portfolio standards and then on feed-in tariffs. This paper reviews the Japanese and Australian experience with capital incentives to stimulate the residential market for photovoltaics. It demonstrates the ability of a market-sensitive program to stimulate industrial growth, achieve unit cost reductions and shift the market to include a large grid-tied share. Residential respondents to surveys report high costs as their primary barrier to installing photovoltaic systems and state a strong preference for capital incentives to reduce their investment costs. The Canadian government needs a market stimulation policy if it is to join those countries where a decentralized photovoltaic generation system strengthens the electricity supply system. A balanced solar energy market stimulation program is proposed that combines a feed-in tariff with a declining capital incentive.

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