A commercial solar system is a financial proposition so:
A business owner is contemplating a 100 kW solar system to negate his incredibly high electricity bill but this is one of other options he has looked at:
Now money has a value and in a previous presentation we looked at:
But what about ROI ( Return on investment),IRR ( Internal rate of return) and Payback period?
The question is what is the relationship between all these financial concepts?
Before that we have to look at the commercial solar system details and make some assumptions.
In this example we will look at a commercial solar investment:
The assumptions around this particular system include:
Below you can see the savings per year and the total savings after 6 x years is $170,097.54. So what is the ROI?
Return on investment (ROI) is an approximate measure of an investment's profitability
ROI= (Net Return on Investment)/(Cost of Investment) x 100%
Advantages of Return on Investment (ROI:
The disadvantages though are:
Annualized ROI helps account for a key omission in standard ROI—namely, how long an investment is held.
With the scenario we have looked at,the time period is 6 years but with solar the reality is that the system will produce for far longer than that.
Let’s look at 10 years for a variety of measures:
What about payback period? Is this a valid measure of the worth of an investment?What is the Payback Period?
Payback period (PBP) is the time (number of years) it takes for the cash flows of incomes from a particular project to cover the initial investment.
When a CFO faces a choice, he will prefer the project with the shortest payback period.
Advantages of Payback Period
Disadvantages of payback periods
The cost of the system is $100,000 and the payback period turns out to be a little over 3.5 years.
But if we look at the discounted payback figure we get a different result as this takes into account the time value of money.
In fact the payback is a little under 5 years ( 5 year point present value savings of $109,715.2)
There are many ways that the worth of a particular investment, 6 years, in this case a 100 kW solar system, can be looked at:
The importance of understanding these financial metrics applies to both the renewable energy sales person presenting these proposals and the business person who needs to make an assessment on a range of options.
Go solar!
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