Abstract

Despite large amounts of available roof space, long pay-back periods for investments in photovoltaic (PV) power plants often hinder PV installations in industrial parks. Photovoltaic citizen participation initiatives (PV-CPI) are an alternative way of financing PV power plants that add non-financial benefits to these investments. This paper analyzed the feasibility of the installation of PV power plants focused on high rates of self-consumption financed by citizen participation initiatives on the roofs of five companies located in the Austrian Ennshafen industrial business park based on the net present value and the discounted pay-back period and compared it to a standard financing scheme, assuming a predetermined interest rate for participants as well as economies of scale with respect to the specific installation costs due to a joint purchase of the PV power plants. To calculate the feasibility, site-specific data and literature input have been used. The results show that despite an interest rate above the current interest rates of conservative forms of investments provided to (small-scale) investors, a payback-period of 17–23 years can be reached while the joint purchase can lead to a competitive feasibility of the PV-CPI compared to an individual purchase of PV power plants.

Highlights

  • By the end of 2019, Austria featured grid-connected photovoltaic (PV) power plants with a total power capacity of approximately 1702 Megawatt peak (MWp), generating approximately one percent of the electricity production in Austria [1].The objective of the Austrian Government Program stipulated within the National Energy and Climate Plan is to produce 100% of the electricity consumed in Austria from renewable energy sources by 2030 [2]

  • Even though regional/Austrian levelized costs of electricity (LCOE) of PV-generated electricity will differ from the global weighted average LCOE shown in Figure 5, studies by the Fraunhofer-Institut ISE indicate that LCOE decreases of PV power plants in Germany have taken place over the last few years, having reached an LCOE range of between 0.0371 €/kWh and 0.1154 €/kWh in 2018 down from a range of 0.078 €/kWh to 0.142 €/kWh in 2013 [36,47]

  • Between 2015 and 2017—with deviations depending on specific situations—it has become more economically feasible to invest in PV power plants on company roofs with a strong focus on self-consumption as opposed to feeding all of the generated PV electricity into the grid

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Summary

Introduction

The objective of the Austrian Government Program stipulated within the National Energy and Climate Plan is to produce 100% of the electricity consumed in Austria from renewable energy sources by 2030 [2]. To reach this objective, it will be necessary to: 1. Considering the physical, technical, and economic requirements to install PV power plants, the feasible potential for PV power plants on Austrian buildings is considered to amount to 4 Terawatt-hours (TWh; equaling roughly 4 GWp), 1.8 TWh (equaling roughly 1.8 GWp) of which is the feasible technical potential on industrial and commercial building roofs, which amounts to 12 % of the necessary capacity increase by 2030 [5]. Essential impediments for extensive installations of PV power plants on buildings go along with comparably long pay-back periods (especially when compared to the usual payback periods in the industry) and high upfront costs in combination with the current low interest rates for classical forms of savings [6], PV-CPIs can be an alternative method of financing PV power plants on company roofs while at the same time integrating small (local) investors

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