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Q1 2023 U.S. Solar Photovoltaic System and Energy Storage Cost Benchmarks With Minimum Sustainable Price Analysis Data File

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The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Solar Energy Technologies Office (SETO) aims to accelerate the advancement and deployment of solar technology in support of an equitable transition to a decarbonized economy no later than 2050, starting with a decarbonized power sector by 2035. Its approach to achieving this goal includes driving innovations in technology, hardware, and soft cost reductions to make solar affordable and accessible for all. As part of this effort, SETO must track solar cost trends so it can focus its research and development (R&D) on the highest-impact activities. The benchmarks in this report are bottom-up cost estimates of all major inputs to PV and energy storage system installations. Bottom-up costs are based on national averages and do not necessarily represent typical costs in all local markets. Like last year's report, this year's report includes two distinct sets of benchmarks: minimum sustainable price (MSP) benchmarks and modeled market price (MMP) benchmarks. MSP benchmarks can be interpreted as the minimum price a company needs to charge to remain financially solvent in the long term based on the minimum sustainable prices of all inputs including minimum sustainable profit margins. MMP benchmarks can be interpreted as the actual cash sales price a company charges in the given benchmark period. These simplified estimates are useful for tracking technological progress, but they do not reflect all experiences. In fact, no individual estimate under any approach can reflect the diversity of the PV and storage manufacturing and installation industries.

Citation Formats

TY - DATA AB - The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Solar Energy Technologies Office (SETO) aims to accelerate the advancement and deployment of solar technology in support of an equitable transition to a decarbonized economy no later than 2050, starting with a decarbonized power sector by 2035. Its approach to achieving this goal includes driving innovations in technology, hardware, and soft cost reductions to make solar affordable and accessible for all. As part of this effort, SETO must track solar cost trends so it can focus its research and development (R&D) on the highest-impact activities. The benchmarks in this report are bottom-up cost estimates of all major inputs to PV and energy storage system installations. Bottom-up costs are based on national averages and do not necessarily represent typical costs in all local markets. Like last year's report, this year's report includes two distinct sets of benchmarks: minimum sustainable price (MSP) benchmarks and modeled market price (MMP) benchmarks. MSP benchmarks can be interpreted as the minimum price a company needs to charge to remain financially solvent in the long term based on the minimum sustainable prices of all inputs including minimum sustainable profit margins. MMP benchmarks can be interpreted as the actual cash sales price a company charges in the given benchmark period. These simplified estimates are useful for tracking technological progress, but they do not reflect all experiences. In fact, no individual estimate under any approach can reflect the diversity of the PV and storage manufacturing and installation industries. AU - Ramasamy, Vignesh A2 - Zuboy, Jarett A3 - Feldman, David A4 - Margolis, Robert A5 - Desai, Jal A6 - Walker, Andy A7 - Woodhouse, Michael A8 - O'Shaughnessy, Eric A9 - Basore, Paul DB - Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI) DP - Open EI | National Laboratory of the Rockies DO - KW - solar cost KW - pv cost KW - battery system cost KW - solar plus storage cost KW - 2023 solar cost KW - 2023 battery cost LA - English DA - 2023/09/25 PY - 2023 PB - National Renewable Energy Laboratory T1 - Q1 2023 U.S. Solar Photovoltaic System and Energy Storage Cost Benchmarks With Minimum Sustainable Price Analysis Data File UR - https://data.openei.org/submissions/8272 ER -
Export Citation to RIS
Ramasamy, Vignesh, et al. Q1 2023 U.S. Solar Photovoltaic System and Energy Storage Cost Benchmarks With Minimum Sustainable Price Analysis Data File. National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 25 September, 2023, NREL. https://data.nlr.gov/submissions/221.
Ramasamy, V., Zuboy, J., Feldman, D., Margolis, R., Desai, J., Walker, A., Woodhouse, M., O'Shaughnessy, E., & Basore, P. (2023). Q1 2023 U.S. Solar Photovoltaic System and Energy Storage Cost Benchmarks With Minimum Sustainable Price Analysis Data File. [Data set]. NREL. National Renewable Energy Laboratory. https://data.nlr.gov/submissions/221
Ramasamy, Vignesh, Jarett Zuboy, David Feldman, Robert Margolis, Jal Desai, Andy Walker, Michael Woodhouse, Eric O'Shaughnessy, and Paul Basore. Q1 2023 U.S. Solar Photovoltaic System and Energy Storage Cost Benchmarks With Minimum Sustainable Price Analysis Data File. National Renewable Energy Laboratory, September, 25, 2023. Distributed by NREL. https://data.nlr.gov/submissions/221
@misc{OEDI_Dataset_8272, title = {Q1 2023 U.S. Solar Photovoltaic System and Energy Storage Cost Benchmarks With Minimum Sustainable Price Analysis Data File}, author = {Ramasamy, Vignesh and Zuboy, Jarett and Feldman, David and Margolis, Robert and Desai, Jal and Walker, Andy and Woodhouse, Michael and O'Shaughnessy, Eric and Basore, Paul}, abstractNote = {The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Solar Energy Technologies Office (SETO) aims to accelerate the advancement and deployment of solar technology in support of an equitable transition to a decarbonized economy no later than 2050, starting with a decarbonized power sector by 2035. Its approach to achieving this goal includes driving innovations in technology, hardware, and soft cost reductions to make solar affordable and accessible for all. As part of this effort, SETO must track solar cost trends so it can focus its research and development (R\&D) on the highest-impact activities. The benchmarks in this report are bottom-up cost estimates of all major inputs to PV and energy storage system installations. Bottom-up costs are based on national averages and do not necessarily represent typical costs in all local markets. Like last year's report, this year's report includes two distinct sets of benchmarks: minimum sustainable price (MSP) benchmarks and modeled market price (MMP) benchmarks. MSP benchmarks can be interpreted as the minimum price a company needs to charge to remain financially solvent in the long term based on the minimum sustainable prices of all inputs including minimum sustainable profit margins. MMP benchmarks can be interpreted as the actual cash sales price a company charges in the given benchmark period. These simplified estimates are useful for tracking technological progress, but they do not reflect all experiences. In fact, no individual estimate under any approach can reflect the diversity of the PV and storage manufacturing and installation industries.}, url = {https://data.nlr.gov/submissions/221}, year = {2023}, howpublished = {NREL, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, https://data.nlr.gov/submissions/221}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-04} }

Details

Data from Sep 25, 2023

Last updated Mar 12, 2026

Submitted Sep 25, 2023

Organization

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Contact

Vignesh Ramasamy

Authors

Vignesh Ramasamy

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Jarett Zuboy

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

David Feldman

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Robert Margolis

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Jal Desai

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Andy Walker

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Michael Woodhouse

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Eric O'Shaughnessy

Clean KWS

Paul Basore

Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, DOE

DOE Project Details

Project Name Solar Technology Cost Analysis

Project Number DE-AC36-08GO28308

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