To offset approximately 450 kWh of monthly electricity consumption (roughly 15 kWh per day), you will need a solar system ranging from 4.5 kW to 6.5 kW, depending on site conditions (sunlight intensity, losses, shading) and the business's load requirements.
Detailed Specifications and Design Considerations
1. Convert monthly consumption to a daily target
450 kWh ÷ 30 = 15 kWh/day
Add performance buffer (10–25%) to account for efficiency losses, seasonal variations, and redundancy → Target set at ~16.5 to 18.8 kWh/day
2. Determine Site Peak Sunlight Duration
Peak sunlight hours = Average daily full-sun equivalent duration
Approx. 3.5–4.5 hours/day for most Northeast U.S. regions
3. Apply derating factors (losses)
Actual system losses include: inverter efficiency losses, line losses, dust accumulation, shading effects, temperature impacts, and module mismatch
Typical derating factor = 0.75 to 0.85 (i.e., 15–25% loss)
4. Calculate required DC system capacity
Formula:
> Required DC Power (kW) = Daily Target Electricity Consumption (kWh) ÷ Peak Daily Sunlight Hours ÷ Derating Factor
Assuming 17 kWh/day, 4.0 sunlight hours, derating factor 0.80:
17 ÷ 4.0 ÷ 0.80 = 5.3125 kW DC
5. Convert DC Capacity to Panel Quantity, Area, and Layout
Using 400-watt panels: 5.3125 ÷ 0.4 = ~13.3 → ~14 panels
Panel area: Typical 60-cell (residential) panel approx. 17–18 sq ft (1.7 sq m) ([Solartap][1])
14 panels × ~1.7 m² = ~23.8 m² (or ~255 sq ft)
Account for setbacks, spacing, shading, access paths, tilt angle, and orientation
6. Commercial/Enterprise Adjustments and Considerations
a. Peak Demand, Load Curves, and Demand Charges
Even low electricity consumption (kWh) may involve high instantaneous demand (kW), driving up billing costs
System design should focus on reducing demand charges, not just offsetting energy consumption
b. Scalability and Margin Planning
Allow 10-25% buffer capacity for future load growth (e.g., new equipment, EV chargers)
Reserve rooftop or ground space for future expansion
c. Inverter Selection and DC/AC Power Ratio
In most commercial projects, DC power can be appropriately scaled up (e.g., 1.1x or 1.2x) within manufacturer limits
Over-sizing helps mitigate low-irradiance periods
d. Energy Storage/Hybrid/Backup Systems
For load shifting or backup power objectives, battery capacity design must be considered; PV array size has limited impact but directly determines battery and inverter costs
Establish system models based on battery load curves to optimize configurations
e. Seasonal Performance and Winter Margin
Winter generation may drop 30-50% below average levels.
Design must meet annual energy goals, not just summer generation targets.
f. Regulatory Policies, Grid Connection Standards, and Net Energy Output Rules
Understand local net metering policies, feed-in tariff subsidies, and output restrictions.
Some regions impose output caps; over-sizing may prove counterproductive.