Showing posts with label SDGE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SDGE. Show all posts

Friday, November 6, 2009

Nov 2-6: Dow, NASDAQ Up Over 3%; Solar Almost 2%


Solar holding its own...

MarketWatch reported today says a surge in GE stocks helped the DJIA go above 10,000 again after a two-week losing period. Week's end closing showed the Dow up 3.2% and NASDAQ up 3.3% while solar stocks in the 20SSI gained about 1.9% since last Friday.

As expected, declines for the Dow were lead by financials and conventional energy firms, which were effected by a $2 per barrel drop in oil. MarketPlace said about half of the Dow's gain could be attributed to a 6.2% spike in GE after analysts at Sanford C. Bernstein and Oppenheimer upgraded the conglomerate to a "outperform" rating.

Market players on Wall Street are disgruntled with unemployment figures but all-out panic has been tempered simply by 22 consecutive months of job losses. Bulls are pointing to month-to-month slowing of job cuts as a sign a full-blown turnaround is on its way, mayber as early as next quarter.

Meanwhile, both residential and commercial solar activity seems to be percolating nicely in California. The Ca Center for Sustainable Energy, which administers the CA Solar Initiative rebate for SDG&E customers, received 200 rebate reservations for residential installations in September after a flat August but a 350 reservation request month in July. Of course, high air-conditioning usage during these months resulting in fat electric bills can account for the solar backlash. But the surprising number of rebate reservations comes even as the rebate has triggered down to $1.55 per installed AC watt in July and now stands at $1.10 in the SDG&E service area.

20 Solar Stocks Index Week of Nov 2-6, 2009

Monday Open Friday Close Up/Down % Change Close 1/5/09* Close 3/6/09**
Dow Jones DJIA 9712.73 10023.42 +310.69 +3.198% 8952.89 6626.95
NASDAQ 2045.11 2112.44 +67.33 +3.292 1628.03 1293.85






Akeena Solar AKNS .94 .93 -.01 -1.075 2.28 .61
Amtel Systems ASYS 5.40 5.10 -.30 -5.882 4.00 2.73
Applied Materials AMAT 12.20 12.40 +.20 +1.639 10.67 8.70
Canadian Solar CSIQ 14.58 16.78 +2.20 +15.09 7.00 3.0601
ECD (UniSolar) ENER 10.77 11.49 +.72 +6.685 29.33 17.45
Entech Solar ENSL.OB .1450 .1400 -.0050 -3.571 .28 .23
Evergreen Solar ESLR 1.45 1.42 -.03 -1.398 3.60 1.03
First Solar FSLR 121.93 117.93 -4.00 -3.391 157.80 108.49
GT Solar Int. SOLR 5.25 5.24 -.01 -.1908 4.00 4.02
JA Solar JASO 3.83 3.71 -.12 -3.234 5.09 1.91
Kyocera KYO 83.47 83.95 -.48 -.5750 71.87 54.21
LDK Solar LDK 6.78 5.74 -1.04 -18.12 14.84 4.40
MEMC Elect. WFR 12.41 12.66 +.25 +2.014 15.76 13.68
Renesola SOL 3.68 3.95 +.27 -7.336 5.15 2.1201
Satcon SATC 2.04 2.00 -.04 -2.000 1.60 1.23
SolarFun SOLF 4.75 5.12 +.37 +7.789 6.12 2.30
SunPower SPWRA 24.81 26.60 +1.79 +7.214 45.13 23.39
SunTech STP 12.67 12.70 +.03 +.2367 13.55 5.34
Trina Solar TSL 32.52 38.18 +5.66 +17.40 10.09 7.23
Yingli YGE 11.58 12.14 +.56 +4.835 7.25 3.888
20SSI Weekly Cumulative: Previous 371.21 Current 378.18 Change +6.97/+1.87% Avg Stock +.8% 1/05/09* 415.41 3/06/09** 266.01
* The starting date of the 20 Solar Stock Index (20SSI).
** The Concensus "new" bull market began on Monday, March 9, 2009.
NOTE: All above stocks have market capitization of $100M+ except Akeena Solar, Amtel Systems
and Entech Solar. This listing is strictly informational and implies neither endorsement or disapproval
of any stock listed. Comments and suggestions are always welcome.


allvoices

Friday, September 18, 2009

Sept 14-18: Solar Outpaces Dow, NASDAQ Again


Strong week all around; Dow approaches 10,000


The 20 Solar Stocks Index (20SSI) gained a sparkling 8% this week compared to the Dow's and NASDAQ's 2.2 and 2.5% gains respectively. It is usually a blah month for trading but all three indexes gained for the second straight week.

MarketPlace reported consumer stocks, including Procter & Gamble, Sara Lee and Home Depot, showed lead the rally that pushed the Dow up nearly 214 points. The NASDAQ gained nearly 52 points, the eighth week in the last ten to rise.

The 20SSI gained over 33 points for the week with First Solar, JA Solar and SunPower leading the pack. All but four stocks went up in what could be the beginning of a consistent rise for solar installations. Here in California news of steep rate hikes next year by Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric certainly helps the industry without the need for more state or federal incentives. Even conservative companies are looking at renewable energy because the low cost of panels and ever-increasing electricity costs make solar or wind power imperative. Solar trackers are coming more into play as more incentives are performance based and they help to eke out more power as the panels follow the sun's path.

China is committing to 20% of its power demand to come from solar and wind by 2020. As authoritarian governments go, implementation of solar projects are much quicker to be built than in most Western (democratic) countries with their layers of government and compliance. China's commitment could drive up the cost of panels worldwide as their multi-megawatt PV projects devour existing panel supplies. This is no far out possibility. It is said the cost of concrete, steel and copper was sky-high because of the copious amounts of these materials used to complete the Beijing Olympics.


The 20 Solar Stocks Index Week of September 14-18, 2009

Monday Open Friday Close Up/Down % Change Close 1/5/09* Close 3/6/09**
Dow Jones DJIA 9605.41 9820.20 +214.79 +2.236% 8952.89 6626.95
NASDAQ 2080.90 2132.86 +51.96 +2.496 1628.03 1293.85






Akeena Solar AKNS 1.1701 1.23 +.0599 +5.119 2.28 .61
Amtel Systems ASYS 5.01 5.50 +.49 +9.780 4.00 2.73
Applied Materials AMAT 13.51 13.03 -.48 -3.684 10.67 8.70
Canadian Solar CSIQ 16.58 17.62 +1.04 +6.272 7.00 3.0601
ECD (UniSolar) ENER 13.40 13.53 +.13 +.9701 29.33 17.45
Entech Solar ENSL.OB .1750 .1800 +.0050 +2.857 .28 .23
Evergreen Solar ESLR 1.94 1.88 -.06 -3.191 3.60 1.03
First Solar FSLR 136.75 156.15 +19.40 +14.18 157.80 108.49
GT Solar Int. SOLR 5.35 5.86 +.51 +9.532 4.00 4.02
JA Solar JASO 3.90 4.60 +.70 +17.95 5.09 1.91
Kyocera KYO 88.05 89.37 +1.32 +1.499 71.87 54.21
LDK Solar LDK 9.75 9.39 -.36 -3.833 14.84 4.40
MEMC Elect. WFR 17.21 18.90 +1.69 +9.819 15.76 13.68
Renesola SOL 5.86 6.00 +.14 +2.389 5.15 2.1201
Satcon SATC 1.90 1.90 NC NC 1.60 1.23
SolarFun SOLF 5.94 6.43 +.49 +8.249 6.12 2.30
SunPower SPWRA 29.15 33.09 +3.94 +13.51 45.13 23.39
SunTech STP 15.97 16.96 +.99 +6.199 13.55 5.34
Trina Solar TSL 29.07 31.45 +2.38 +8.187 10.09 7.23
Yingli YGE 12.98 14.05 +1.07 +8.243 7.25 3.888
20SSI Weekly Cumulative: Previous 413.67 Current 447.12 Change +33.45/+8% Avg Stock +5.7% 1/05/09* 415.41 3/06/09** 266.01
* The starting date of the 20 Solar Stock Index (20SSI).
** The Concensus "new" bull market began on Monday, March 9, 2009.
NOTE: All above stocks have market capitization of $100M+ except Akeena Solar, Amtel Systems
and Entech Solar. This listing is strictly informational and implies neither endorsement or disapproval
of any stock listed. Comments and suggestions are always welcome.


allvoices

Thursday, May 28, 2009

SEPA Names Top 10 Solar Utilities in U.S.



CA utilities rank 1, 2, 3 and 9

The Solar Electric Power Association (SEPA) released its second annual "Top Ten Utility Solar Integration Rankings" based on data through 2008. U.S. utilities were ranked according to installed solar capacity in categories including customer-side of the meter (net metering); utility-side of the meter; solar capacity per customer and more.

As expected, California held four of the top 10 utilities for total megawatts of solar installed in 2008, including the top three spots. Pacific Gas & Electric (Central to Northern CA) ranked first with 84.9MW installed in 2008 followed by Southern California Edison (LA to AZ border) at 32.4MW installed and San Diego Gas & Electric was third with 16MW installed. Sacramento Municipal Utility District ranked ninth with 2.9MW installed. Rounding out the top 10 in order were utilities from Colorado (14.2MW), New Jersey (5.5MW), Arizona (3.56MW), Hawaii (3.54MW), Oregon (3.538MW), New York (2.5MW).

Total cumulative solar capacity through 2008 showed five California utilities in the top ten. In order these were Southern California Edison with 441.4MWac total capacity installed; Pacific Gas & Electric, 229.5MW; Nevada Energy, 7.9MW; San Diego Gas & Electric, 49.3MW; Public Service Co. of Colorado (Xcell Energy), 28.5MW; LA Dept. of Water & Power, 13.6MW; Public Service Electric & Gas Co. of New Jersey, 13.2MW; Arizona Public Service Co., 10.6MW; Sacramento Municipal Utility Dist., 10.2MW; and Long Island Power Authority of New York, 7.7MW installed.

To download the complete report, go to: http://www.solarelectricpower.org/docs/SEPA%20Utility%20Solar%20Integration%20Rankings-2008.Public%20release.pdf


allvoices

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Solar Rebate Reservations Down Slightly in SD


Still too early to show
2009 trend

Katrina Perez, non-residential program manager for the CA Solar Initiative in San Diego (SDGE area), was asked by Solar Advice for Free to compare the beginning of 2009 to 2008 for reserving rebates for solar installations other than residential. Although little data is available, applications were down just 11% from last year.

"In a comparison of Jan & Feb of 2008 to Jan & Feb of 2009 - nine applications [were submitted] in January and the first half February 2008 compared to eight in 2009 [for the same period], an 11% decrease," said Perez, a staffer at the CA Center for Sustainable Energy. She also said the last quarter of '08 CCSE saw just ten applications submitted. "The number of applications that are received in the Non-res sector has been sporadic in the past 2 years," she added. Adjacent graphs show non-residential rebate activity (SDGE territory) since the CSI began January, 2007. (Click for larger images.)

As of today, issued non-residential rebate reservation letters from CCSE amount to 1.26MW worth of projects; only 9.8% of the 12.87MW available in Step 5 of the CSI declining rebate schedule. An anemic 120kW of rebate applications are presently under review at CCSE. (See CSI Statewide Trigger Point Tracker at http://www.sgip-ca.com/.)

California trails only Germany and Japan in total photovoltaic installations, economic uncertainty and tight credit are influencing decisions to go solar. It's also much too early to tell what the new stimulus package--including about $80 billion in solar incentives--is having on the industry. If solar stocks are any indication, it's not a pretty picture.


allvoices

Thursday, January 29, 2009

CA Home Solar Sales 2009: Early Results


John Supp, program manager of the CA Solar Initiative at the California Center for Sustainable Energy (CCSE), said 71 residential solar rebate applications have been processed thus far this month by SDG&E customers with another 12 apps just hitting his desk. Nearly twice as many reserved rebates in 2008 compared to 2007. Despite the weak economy, Supp said this is a good start compared to a year ago and is a likely reflection of the improved federal tax credit.

"A lot of buyers are purchasing 5kWDC systems so the 30% tax credit means $9000 instead of the $2000 maximum allowed [from 2006 through 2008]," said Supp. He went on to say it appears installed costs have dropped from December to this month. Average installed cost last month in San Diego was $8.40/WDC; this month it's about $7.98/WDC installed but he adds this if from a relively small sampling. This compares to $8.52/W in the PG&E territory (Santa Barbara to San Francisco) and $9.05/W in the SoCal Edison area (Central CA).

Has there been a major drop in panel costs as was widely anticipated late last year?

"There's been a lag in the market and supply to see much noticeable change in panel prices. In fact, statewide installed prices are up from the last six months of '08," Supp remarked. Average installed costs for home PV systems from July-December averaged $8.17/WDC and this month it's up to $8.70 statewide with the limited data available. Supp surmises the impact of the 30% solar tax credit [with the CSI rebate], which defrays so much more of the cost for the end user, could be the culprit. Cost data has fluctuated differently over the years in each utility territory and there is the obvious answer. Still, it's much too early to say if this will be a continuing trend.

In 2007, when the CA Solar Initiative (Million Solar Roofs) went into effect, 560 rebate applications were filed with CCSE by SDG&E customers with only 25 were cancellations (4.46%). Last year 1074 applications were processed with just 11 cancelling (1%).

"The fact so many went solar last year is exciting for the industry in that the rebate was reducing from the initial $2.50 per watt and the tax credit was just $2000," said Supp. "It seems people are realizing that while incentives are depleting, solar's value keeps rising."


allvoices
 

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