Another 3,000 rooftop solar rebates were snapped up on Monday via the Victorian state government’s Solar Homes scheme, and around 1,600 still up for grabs five hours in to the launch of the mid-November allocation.
The mid-month offer of discounted residential solar – up to $2,225 off the cost of a rooftop PV system – follows the November 1 allocation of 4,524 rebates and an expansion of the government’s home battery offer.
The comparatively slow-moving battery rebate was opened up to households across 104 Victorian postcodes, compared to the original 24, and another 400 rebates were put up for application, offering discounts of up to $4,838 on a residential storage system.
All up, the government hopes to deliver 10,000 household solar batteries under the scheme, but the offer has not proven nearly as popular as the rooftop solar rebate. According to the Solar Victoria website, 404 out of 456 battery rebates remained available on Monday.
As we noted two weeks ago, householders seeking to apply for discounted storage must get approval for a battery from their distribution network service provider before installation, have an existing solar PV system larger than 5kW, and meet other eligibility criteria – as well as strict new national home battery installation guidelines.
The Victoria solar rebate, on the other hand, is still hugely popular – although it’s not moving at the break-neck speeds of the program’s early days.
Now held twice monthly, and with higher allocations, industry and consumers both appear to be much happier with the process.
Industry had claimed the original design of the scheme, which starting in July offered only 3,333 rebates each month, had put an effective cap on the market, and pushed some businesses to the brink of insolvency.
The July allocation of the rebate – which is limited to households with a combined annual income of no more than $180,000 – was exhausted within three days, while the August allocation was snapped up in just 90 minutes.
The pattern of uptake this week looks much the same as on November 01, with 75 per cent of rebates gone within a few hours, and then moving to a much slower pace.
Sophie is editor of One Step Off The Grid and deputy editor of its sister site, Renew Economy. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.
This post was published on November 18, 2019 2:39 pm
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The reason is batteries are still too dear for the mass market plus installation requirements are very arduous
Also, if you have claimed the rebate for panels you cannot claim for battery. Hard enough to make financial sense to install a battery with the rebates. If the government were to encourage VPP in Vic could also tip the scales..
Most people who have installed solar independently have not used systems larger than 5KwH capacity. In particular, in Ausnet territory, you need a special permit to have such a large system. Therefore, not so many residents are entitled to the battery subsidy.