In the country where I live, thare are regions where the grid doesn’t accept new production capacity - because installed capacity covers local demand and electricity cannot get where it would be needed.
Also, planning is slow and permits are issued slowly - I have an acquaintance who created a semi-legal solar park because waiting for permits would take too long. Electrically, everything is fine, professionals wrote the project and did the job. The parish just wasn’t informed, only the grid company was. Since it’s a small park, it flies under the radar. :o
My own installation isn’t worthy of the name “solar park”, but it’s entirely outside law - to avoid needing a permit, I dropped the voltage, ran thicker copper (to make things work with lower voltage) and didn’t get a grid connection. As a result, I didn’t need to wait for someone to give me a permit.
Yes, this backlog seems to being caused by infrastructure and training falling short of where it should be (or solar going faster than expected). It should have been predicted and plans set in place years ago so this would all be seamless.
The concern now is that production will be throttled back and the companies doing the installations will suffer.
Here in the UK they cut the feed-in-tariff (the amount you get paid for putting spare electricity back into the grid) and that wrecked the industry overnight.
I think the same.
In the country where I live, thare are regions where the grid doesn’t accept new production capacity - because installed capacity covers local demand and electricity cannot get where it would be needed.
Also, planning is slow and permits are issued slowly - I have an acquaintance who created a semi-legal solar park because waiting for permits would take too long. Electrically, everything is fine, professionals wrote the project and did the job. The parish just wasn’t informed, only the grid company was. Since it’s a small park, it flies under the radar. :o
My own installation isn’t worthy of the name “solar park”, but it’s entirely outside law - to avoid needing a permit, I dropped the voltage, ran thicker copper (to make things work with lower voltage) and didn’t get a grid connection. As a result, I didn’t need to wait for someone to give me a permit.
Yes, this backlog seems to being caused by infrastructure and training falling short of where it should be (or solar going faster than expected). It should have been predicted and plans set in place years ago so this would all be seamless.
The concern now is that production will be throttled back and the companies doing the installations will suffer.
Here in the UK they cut the feed-in-tariff (the amount you get paid for putting spare electricity back into the grid) and that wrecked the industry overnight.