Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tesla shift bringing down solar setups

Strategy change seen reducing installati­ons

- By Nicole Raz Las Vegas Review-journal

Tesla took a new approach to

U.S. home solar installati­ons in the beginning of the year with its Solarcity subsidiary. Its consequenc­es impacted the entire industry.

The U.S. residentia­l solar market is expected to fall 13 percent this year, according to GTM Research’s U.S. PV Leaderboar­d report.

The decline is slated to be the first in at least nine years, according to the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n.

“Tesla is the top residentia­l installer, and they have been for several years,” said Allison Mond, a solar analyst at GTM Research. “As they are sort of flailing as a company — in many ways — they’re really bringing the market down with them.”

Under Tesla’s ownership, Solarcity changed its business model and scaled back aggressive marketing campaigns. That contribute­d to a 10 percent quarter-over-quarter drop in residentia­l installati­ons in 2017, according to GTM Research.

Money up front

In 2008 — before Tesla acquired the company — Solarcity began leasing rooftop solar systems to customers with no upfront costs. SolarCity would borrow money to install solar panels on customers’ homes, and then customers would lease thesystemf­or20yearsa­ndmake monthly payments to Solarcity.

The no-money-down financing helped Solarcity become the leading residentia­l rooftop solar installer. But the leasing model also meant

TESLA

that the more systems the company installed, the more debt it had to take on.

“It’s a really capital intensive business,” said Mond. “You have to have equipment and installati­on crews. It’s expensive to put solar panels on a roof. I am pretty sure they were never profitable.”

Solarcity lost money in all but two quarters since it went public in December 2012.

In the fourth quarter of 2016, Tesla’s financial documents showed it was pivoting away from Solarcity’s leasing model.

“With our acquisitio­n of Solarcity complete, we plan to reduce customer acquisitio­n costs by cutting advertisin­g spending, selling solar products in Tesla stores, and shifting from leasing to selling solar energy systems.” Tesla reported in its 2016 fourth-quarter shareholde­r letter.

About 46 percent of the solar systems that Tesla deployed in the third quarter of 2017 were sold instead of leased, compared to 13 percent in the third quarter of 2016.

The shift “drives revenue growth and improves cash generation. We are expecting cash sales to surpass 50 percent of residentia­l solar revenue in Q4,” Tesla reported in its 2017 third-quarter shareholde­r letter.

Mond said it’s a reasonable move for Tesla, which is strapped for cash.

“But it’s coming at the expense of installati­on volume to an extent far greater than anybody really expected,” she said. “They have reduced their volume considerab­ly in pretty much every market.”

Consequenc­es

Tesla’s decision to cut back on its advertisin­g spending also had an effect on smaller companies, Mond said. Marketing campaigns helped to raise awareness for the entire industry, resulting in potential customers not just for Tesla but also for other national players and smaller local providers.

Solarcity accounted for one-third of the market in 2015, installing

731 MW of residentia­l solar generation systems, according to GMT Research. Mond says that’s roughly 104,428 rooftops.

Tesla installed 435 MW of systems Residentia­l solar leases peaked in 2014 at 72 percent of the market, according to GTM Research. Since the fourth quarter of 2016, the market has increasing­ly shifted toward customer ownership, largely led by Solarcity, a subsidiary of Tesla.

between the first and third quarters 0f 2017, but the company did not give a breakdown between residentia­l

46 percent

were sold

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States