Just a note: this may go nowhere. I may just learn some stuff with you guys' help, and do nothing with that knowledge. Or maybe I'll do something really cool, who knows.
Some of you know I like to sell surplus as a side gig. Well, a very big pile of solar panels and inverters has presented itself and if I do buy them it will elevate the side gig to a pretty big deal. However, a completely bonkers thought jumped into my head: what if, instead of just piling them in a warehouse and reselling them, I bought a piece of property and installed them and sold the power they generate? That of course is a simple way of talking about doing a very expensive and complicated thing.
But ideas are tricky, and some stick with you and pick at your brain. I've been mulling this over for a couple days and can't discard it and move past it. So, I'd like to find out what's involved in becoming a commercial scale power generator. In the 3 megawatt range. I saw a lot of info online referring to solar farms costing in the $1/watt range to build, which would mean $3,000,000 and is way out of my league. However, what if you already had the solar panels and inverters and land? Wouldn't that be the vast majority of the costs? I'm coming up with, in addition to the panels and inverters:
-Racking to hold panels
-Wiring to connect panels and connect to grid
-Engineering
-Permitting
-Installation
-Legal - agreements with regional transmission organization
-Wiring to connect to grid and utility charges for that connection
I just have no way to figure out what those last couple will cost. The other items I can suss out with some keyboard warrioring and have come up with some best guesses. But the other stuff? NO CLUE. Is there a solar consultant out there that could talk me out of this with an hour of his time? I'm assuming there are financing sources for projects like this, but who are they and would they be okay with used equipment?
The land I found is 15 acres directly in the path of high tension lines coming from a major power substation just over a mile away from the land. It's in farm country, which I know is where they are putting a lot of solar farms, but is not actually farm land itself so might not raise neighbor's ire. In Ohio I don't think you need approval for power siting in the 3 megawatt range.
I see "wholesale pricing" of $.05/kwh and 4.1 hours of solar energy per day in the target area, which would put the power generated at close to $250k/year. But when I check the applicable RTO (regtional transmission organization, apparently the people I would sell the power to?) website it looks like the actual energy portion of that $.05/kwh is only around $.02/kwh. Is that possible? Seems too cheap. Nobody would spend $3,000,000 on a project that would gross $100,000 a year. So maybe I'm reading that info wrong. Which is again why I'm here
And while I understand that I have to sell the power to my local RTO, what are the mechanics of that? Where do I connect - at that substation near the target land or do I have to worry about whether that substation has capacity and whether I'll get permission to connect?
Suddenly the idea of leasing 5,000sf of warehouse space and receiving, processing, and reselling 300 pallets of solar panels seems simple.