
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
President Biden just announced his administration is placing a 24-month bridge period on new tariffs for solar components imported from the 4 Southeast Asian countries identified in the current Department of Commerce’s anti-dumping/circumvention investigation. Tiernay observed, “a lot of vendors had stepped back from sending product to the United States because they were concerned about retroactive duties being applied to their products… There was a lot of discussion about who would take that risk and who would take the potential price increase.”
While this update from the President is good news (and means the retroactive tariffs are no longer a concern), we don’t expect the flow of modules to immediately ramp up. The supply processes will take time to restart, but this is a positive development for solar in the US and BayWa.
Aaron was a featured speaker at Wood Mackenzie’s Solar & Storage Summit. “I was there to share my experience in the residential solar+storage space and talk through the supply crunch that we’ve been seeing, [as well as, share] some best practices that installers can use to make sure that they are working with their suppliers to ensure the best possible supply outlook.”
His answer: “Installers planning on adding energy storage to their offering have some legwork to do. They need to plan with their suppliers, develop resources internally to support forecasting in terms of what’s actually going to be installed and make sure that that’s being communicated on a regular basis with their distribution partners. They need to engage with manufacturers to take advantage of training and make sure that they’re in line with any certification requirements that exists. And they need to make sure that they are managing customer demand in a way that makes sense.”
The Smart Energy Home of the Future
Senior Director of Technical Marketing, SolarEdge
In other words, your system should manage itself and provide the energy you need when and where you need it. For SolarEdge, this obvious need has morphed into their development of new tools to guide energy reliability. The company’s new series of smart energy devices allows for specially designated usage of certain appliances during certain times.
Economics Meet Resiliency
Senior Director of Technical Marketing, SolarEdge
“The test essentially is proof that under the worst conditions that can be conceived of… that the risk of any propagation of fire is very, very low,” Magnus said. This means that no matter which battery cell a fire might start in, it is unlikely to spread to other cells and propagate a larger fire, i.e., a thermal runaway event. While this risk of fire is very low to begin with, homeowners concerned about safety can be even more reassured.
Senior Director of Technical Marketing, SolarEdge
“We are now actually measuring the temperature of the connectors in order to ensure that if you’re starting to see an arc [SunConnect] will detect it. And when we detect an issue, we will initially flag it… but if it’s [getting] very hot, we will shut down the system and alert whoever is monitoring the system that there is an issue that needs to be addressed,” said Magnus. This combination of SolarEdge’s inverter monitoring system and their newly launched optimizers helps create another level of safety. (SE-S440 optimizers now available in BayWa r.e. webstore.)
Easy Energy System Modeling
Tiernay began her solar career in 2010 and has since worked in various specialties throughout the industry. Her work at a solar installation company doing grassroots marketing and her time at a start-up originating utility-scale projects has helped Tiernay develop a broad understanding of the industry. After several roles in sales at BayWa r.e. Solar Distribution, Tiernay now leads the Key Accounts team to help customers identify patterns in their businesses and evolve their processes for success.
Tiernay holds an MBA and a Bachelor’s in International/Global Studies from the University of Arizona, where she also served as an adjunct professor of business communications. When she isn’t digging into data to find efficiency opportunities for our customers, Tiernay can be found hiking or climbing in the Sonoran Desert with her partner and pups.
BayWa r.e. Solar Distribution supplies residential and commercial solar installers in the United States with quality solar + storage components, forecasting, business planning advice, and a community of experts. Visit www.solar-distribution.com to engage with our team, read our industry insights articles, and stream our Solar Tech Talk podcasts and recorded webinars on YouTube and Spotify. Follow us on LinkedIn and Facebook to stay connected. Ask us about our Financing Program and use our industry-leading Webstore to save time, get gear shipped, and get jobs done!
Part of the BayWa r.e. Global family of renewable energy companies.
The post Solar Tech Talk E12: Module Tariff News & SolarEdge Optimization Options appeared first on BayWa r.e. Solar Systems.
4.9
77 ratings
President Biden just announced his administration is placing a 24-month bridge period on new tariffs for solar components imported from the 4 Southeast Asian countries identified in the current Department of Commerce’s anti-dumping/circumvention investigation. Tiernay observed, “a lot of vendors had stepped back from sending product to the United States because they were concerned about retroactive duties being applied to their products… There was a lot of discussion about who would take that risk and who would take the potential price increase.”
While this update from the President is good news (and means the retroactive tariffs are no longer a concern), we don’t expect the flow of modules to immediately ramp up. The supply processes will take time to restart, but this is a positive development for solar in the US and BayWa.
Aaron was a featured speaker at Wood Mackenzie’s Solar & Storage Summit. “I was there to share my experience in the residential solar+storage space and talk through the supply crunch that we’ve been seeing, [as well as, share] some best practices that installers can use to make sure that they are working with their suppliers to ensure the best possible supply outlook.”
His answer: “Installers planning on adding energy storage to their offering have some legwork to do. They need to plan with their suppliers, develop resources internally to support forecasting in terms of what’s actually going to be installed and make sure that that’s being communicated on a regular basis with their distribution partners. They need to engage with manufacturers to take advantage of training and make sure that they’re in line with any certification requirements that exists. And they need to make sure that they are managing customer demand in a way that makes sense.”
The Smart Energy Home of the Future
Senior Director of Technical Marketing, SolarEdge
In other words, your system should manage itself and provide the energy you need when and where you need it. For SolarEdge, this obvious need has morphed into their development of new tools to guide energy reliability. The company’s new series of smart energy devices allows for specially designated usage of certain appliances during certain times.
Economics Meet Resiliency
Senior Director of Technical Marketing, SolarEdge
“The test essentially is proof that under the worst conditions that can be conceived of… that the risk of any propagation of fire is very, very low,” Magnus said. This means that no matter which battery cell a fire might start in, it is unlikely to spread to other cells and propagate a larger fire, i.e., a thermal runaway event. While this risk of fire is very low to begin with, homeowners concerned about safety can be even more reassured.
Senior Director of Technical Marketing, SolarEdge
“We are now actually measuring the temperature of the connectors in order to ensure that if you’re starting to see an arc [SunConnect] will detect it. And when we detect an issue, we will initially flag it… but if it’s [getting] very hot, we will shut down the system and alert whoever is monitoring the system that there is an issue that needs to be addressed,” said Magnus. This combination of SolarEdge’s inverter monitoring system and their newly launched optimizers helps create another level of safety. (SE-S440 optimizers now available in BayWa r.e. webstore.)
Easy Energy System Modeling
Tiernay began her solar career in 2010 and has since worked in various specialties throughout the industry. Her work at a solar installation company doing grassroots marketing and her time at a start-up originating utility-scale projects has helped Tiernay develop a broad understanding of the industry. After several roles in sales at BayWa r.e. Solar Distribution, Tiernay now leads the Key Accounts team to help customers identify patterns in their businesses and evolve their processes for success.
Tiernay holds an MBA and a Bachelor’s in International/Global Studies from the University of Arizona, where she also served as an adjunct professor of business communications. When she isn’t digging into data to find efficiency opportunities for our customers, Tiernay can be found hiking or climbing in the Sonoran Desert with her partner and pups.
BayWa r.e. Solar Distribution supplies residential and commercial solar installers in the United States with quality solar + storage components, forecasting, business planning advice, and a community of experts. Visit www.solar-distribution.com to engage with our team, read our industry insights articles, and stream our Solar Tech Talk podcasts and recorded webinars on YouTube and Spotify. Follow us on LinkedIn and Facebook to stay connected. Ask us about our Financing Program and use our industry-leading Webstore to save time, get gear shipped, and get jobs done!
Part of the BayWa r.e. Global family of renewable energy companies.
The post Solar Tech Talk E12: Module Tariff News & SolarEdge Optimization Options appeared first on BayWa r.e. Solar Systems.
1,252 Listeners
33 Listeners