winnie
Senior Member
- Location
- Springfield, MA, USA
- Occupation
- Electric motor research
I've been in analysis paralysis on a solar install for my home for about 5 years now. My _ideal_ would be to dump the money into a replacement garage and garden canopy structure with a perfect south facing roof, combined with straight up purchased solar. Well I don't have the funding to for the construction, and I've analyzed myself to the end of the tax credit for an individual purchased system.
So I let myself get sold on the blog standard PPA agreement where the finance company takes all of the tax credits, they own the system, and then they 'sell me power'. I know that over time this is more expensive than just buying the system outright.
This is not a DIY project; I am going to have a professional handle all of the permitting and installation work.
I am looking for input on the contractual side of things because I'm seeing several red flags, and want to know if I am just being paranoid or correctly skeptical.
1) The estimate software provided a basic system design, and that basic design is what is used for the rest of the contract. and is used for the pricing. But the sales rep says 'looking at your roof, I'm sure we can put at least two more panels on at the same price'. I then have his handshake assurance that the system will produce more than the contract says. Is this likely true or not? (My thoughts: solar panels are cheap, and if the geometry is correct then the incremental cost of adding them is small compared to the total system cost, and by adding a couple of more panels they get that much more headroom over their production guarantee, so this 'freebie' might actually have value to the solar company. But I think the big factor here is that it is a sales tactic, making it look like the company is giving me a special deal that I will loose if I don't sign now now now)
2) The rep kinda sorta said that they guarantee their estimated production and if the system produces less then they have to pay me. But the actual threshold for this production guarantee is total production over a two year period, and the threshold is 85% of the estimated production. Ok, so the guarantee is only 85% of the estimated production value, not the estimated production value. How reliable are the estimated production numbers? Do they inflate them a bit to make the numbers look good, or are they conservative so that they don't have warranty claims?
3) The contract documents don't say anything about panel level optimization or monitoring. Should I assume that this is a simple string inverter system with no optimizers? Are optimizers actually important (urban setting, shading from buildings and trees). I know that optimizers mean greater production, but are they actually worth it?
4) The rep said that in the final contract I would need to sign that nothing was promised outside of the contract, and of course I would have to affirm this. So the rep is telling me to lie on the contract with the finance company. *big red flag* My question: is this _typical_, and understood as acceptable, or is this the trap that I think it is?
5) The rep wanted me to forward the docusign email back to them. second big red flag. The e-mail itself says that it should never be forwarded. Is there a legitamate reason that they would want the email?
If you'd prefer, please DM me.
Thanks
Jonathan
Are there other things I should be
If you would be willing to
So I let myself get sold on the blog standard PPA agreement where the finance company takes all of the tax credits, they own the system, and then they 'sell me power'. I know that over time this is more expensive than just buying the system outright.
This is not a DIY project; I am going to have a professional handle all of the permitting and installation work.
I am looking for input on the contractual side of things because I'm seeing several red flags, and want to know if I am just being paranoid or correctly skeptical.
1) The estimate software provided a basic system design, and that basic design is what is used for the rest of the contract. and is used for the pricing. But the sales rep says 'looking at your roof, I'm sure we can put at least two more panels on at the same price'. I then have his handshake assurance that the system will produce more than the contract says. Is this likely true or not? (My thoughts: solar panels are cheap, and if the geometry is correct then the incremental cost of adding them is small compared to the total system cost, and by adding a couple of more panels they get that much more headroom over their production guarantee, so this 'freebie' might actually have value to the solar company. But I think the big factor here is that it is a sales tactic, making it look like the company is giving me a special deal that I will loose if I don't sign now now now)
2) The rep kinda sorta said that they guarantee their estimated production and if the system produces less then they have to pay me. But the actual threshold for this production guarantee is total production over a two year period, and the threshold is 85% of the estimated production. Ok, so the guarantee is only 85% of the estimated production value, not the estimated production value. How reliable are the estimated production numbers? Do they inflate them a bit to make the numbers look good, or are they conservative so that they don't have warranty claims?
3) The contract documents don't say anything about panel level optimization or monitoring. Should I assume that this is a simple string inverter system with no optimizers? Are optimizers actually important (urban setting, shading from buildings and trees). I know that optimizers mean greater production, but are they actually worth it?
4) The rep said that in the final contract I would need to sign that nothing was promised outside of the contract, and of course I would have to affirm this. So the rep is telling me to lie on the contract with the finance company. *big red flag* My question: is this _typical_, and understood as acceptable, or is this the trap that I think it is?
5) The rep wanted me to forward the docusign email back to them. second big red flag. The e-mail itself says that it should never be forwarded. Is there a legitamate reason that they would want the email?
If you'd prefer, please DM me.
Thanks
Jonathan
Are there other things I should be
If you would be willing to
