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Electricity consumption changes following solar adoption: Testing for a solar rebound

Ross C. Beppler, Daniel C. Matisoff, Matthew E. Oliver

2021Economic Inquiry62 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract We use household‐level data to explore residential electricity use patterns following installation of solar panels. Solar adoption leads to an increase in total electricity consumption relative to a matched non‐adopting control group. Our point estimate translates to a rebound effect of 28.5%, suggesting that nearly a third of the electricity produced by a customer's solar panels is used for increased energy services, rather than reduced grid electricity consumption. We explore several potential drivers of an increase in electricity consumption. These results have important implications for electricity planning and policy, suggesting that rooftop solar stimulates additional demand for electricity.

Topics & Concepts

ElectricityConsumption (sociology)Photovoltaic systemElectricity generationGrid parityEnvironmental economicsElectricity demandEconomicsElectricity retailingBusinessPhotovoltaicsNatural resource economicsElectricity marketEngineeringPower (physics)Electrical engineeringPhysicsSociologyQuantum mechanicsSocial scienceEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesEnergy and Environment ImpactsElectric Vehicles and Infrastructure
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