Litcius/Paper detail

The Residential Solar PV in the Mid-Atlantic: A Spatial Panel Approach

Oleg Kucher, Donald J. Lacombe, Sean T. Davidson

2020International Regional Science Review29 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study examines residential solar photovoltaic (PV) adoption in mid-Atlantic counties over the 2005–2016 period. Using a spatial Durbin panel model, we find significant spatial dependence in residential solar PV adoption at the county level. In the presence of spatial dependence, major determinants of the solar adoptions are electricity rates and solar-related policy regulation. The combined direct and indirect effect of electricity rates on solar PV capacity is 5.37 percent increase for a 1 percent increase in electricity price. This spatial coefficient estimate is about twice as large as corresponding panel estimates. We also find that the regulation and incentives significantly boost solar PV demand, which explains about 38 percent variation in residential solar capacity.

Topics & Concepts

Photovoltaic systemPanel dataIncentiveElectricityPhotovoltaicsSpatial variabilitySpatial dependenceEnvironmental scienceEconomicsEconometricsEngineeringMicroeconomicsStatisticsMathematicsElectrical engineeringEnergy and Environment ImpactsSocial Acceptance of Renewable EnergyEnergy, Environment, Economic Growth
The Residential Solar PV in the Mid-Atlantic: A Spatial Panel Approach | Litcius