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Ok, I wasn’t expecting to see such a blatant affirmation for solar panels and solar energy in New Jersey after my visit to “the Google”. Why are they worth it?
Why, hello curious soul who visits our humble website, the best resource for all your solar energy questions you may have, EVER! Here are six reasons why solar makes sense in New Jersey:
Aside from generating electricity and lowering your electric bill which you already pay, the solar panels on your roof will pump out State Renewable Energy Certificates (or SRECs). They are worth big bucks, which your utility company will purchase from you, just to prove they are sourcing their electricity from a clean source, like your rooftop.
For a medium sized solar system, your New Jersey utility company will now pay you about $3,000 a year in SREC payments for the next 15 years. That amounts to roughly $45,000! How cool is that? To learn more about how you could be earning thousands of dollars in just a few months, get hooked up here.
In addition to holding the utility companies accountable for sourcing a small slice of their energy from the sun, the NJ state legislature also enacted a state rebate for solar homeowners. This rebate has stepped down in value as more and more residents have gone solar, but it currently stands at a still hefty amount of $.75/watt. Next year, it may be even less value, so you’ll have to check back with them (or us) to see what the new amount will be. What does $.75/watt mean for an average sized solar system? That amounts to about $4,000. Nothing to sneeze at, more cash right back in your pocket.
The feds will give you a big bonus tax credit for putting solar panels up on your roof in New Jersey, too. On an average sized system after the state rebate, your tax credit will be about $6,000. You can see how all the bonuses are really adding up!
Your new electric bill will probably be something like $15 instead of $120. That makes those monthly living expenses a little easier to deal with, no? Aside from that, just having solar on your roof is the equivalent of planting 70 trees, or eliminating the CO2 from driving across the country 75 times over the life of the system.
There are concerns out there from reasonable people who think that an investment in solar is only for the rich. Yes, even after the bonuses in year 1, an average size solar energy system still will cost about $15,000 (For an example on payback details for a 5kW system, check out our New Jersey solar info page).
But no, the solar door is not slammed in your face if you don’t have stacks of cash lying around your home. Reason being, if you are a PSE&G customer, they will finance your solar system for you which will be repaid by those SREC payments we just mentioned in Reason #1. Therefore, not much out of pocket at all, and you still can make money from the SREC credits down the road. Even if your loan is paid off by the SRECs prior to the 15 year payment window expiration, you’ll still get money from selling your SRECs over to PSE&G for financing purposes. You can request more info about the solar loan program here, or simply sign up with us and an expert will get in touch with you in a jiffy to share all the details with you.
Because we recently partnered with 1BOG in New Jersey, in addition to getting multiple quotes on your solar installation and a great group discount, you’ll get knowledgeable, friendly support from people you can trust. Dave Llorens has been a close friend of mine since we suffered through the same high school english class together back in 1995. In addition to co-founding SPR with me, he is the CEO of 1BOG. All the people hired to assist you through your decision-making process are those we would feel comfortable sharing a meal with, and would happily task with watching our pets, elderly relatives, or our kids (if we had any). They won’t pressure you, and signing up to have them help you out in New Jersey doesn’t obligate you into anything. Go for it!
The chart above is the same solar incentive report card we produced in part 4 of our 2010 report, albeit with one difference: blue and red states. My main impulse was not to rustle a regional divide between people in our country, yet instead to highlight differences in legislative policy and priorities.
I was curious to understand why so many red states lag so far behind in our report and started doing some more research this morning. I figured it can’t be just because of strong oil, gas, and coal lobbies. Could it? Well, who am I kidding, of course it could.
However, I found a ranking of federal dollars spent per dollar of taxes received in each state, and that raised my eyebrows. Here’s a great graphic made by a Harvard blogger which illustrates where our federal dollars flow. I didn’t realize Harvard had blogger guys but I was thankful for this one. I marked his chart up to more clearly show the red and blue states:
All those little red dots in the upper right are red states, the little blue ones to the lower left are blue states. The higher you go up the y-axis, the more conservative the state in the 2008 election. The further across the x-axis you go, the more money you get from the government than you pay in taxes.
If you affiliate yourself with Republican conservatives, you might be surprised to see a strong statistical relationship, but that the direction is the opposite from what you would expect: The red states (those that vote Republican) generally receive more subsidies from the federal government than they pay in taxes; in other words they are further to the right in the graph. It’s the other way around with the blue states (those that vote Democratic).
The big blue outlier way to the right in the graph is New Mexico, though there are several expensive air force bases and some top secret stuff located in the state. I was interested to see the cash cows for the rest of the country are taxpayers in New Jersey, Nevada, Connecticut, Illinois, Delaware, California, New York, and Colorado. Intriguingly, those same states score very well in our solar incentive report above.
This trend in wealth redistribution in the form of subsidies is not a new one. Here’s the trend from 1981-2005 which I just compiled from the Tax Foundation’s data:
The closer you get to being ranked #50, the less the amount of federal taxes coming from your state actually gets spent in your state. Note how Red and Blue states diverge after Reagan took office in 1981 and still haven’t rebalanced? Now there’s a true conservative who got things done!
Who is ranked #50? Well, here’s New Jersey, the state with arguably the best solar incentives in the country:

Not only do the tax dollars in New Jersey flow mainly to Republican states which fare very poorly in our report solar report card, but New Jersey also manages to have the best solar incentives in the country. While those incentives start with a strong renewable portfolio standard instead of tax dollars, it is intriguing to note how money flows through the country, who is tooting what horn, and where progressive solar legislation gets enacted and where it is glossed over.
I think it’s funny that more and more blowhards are tooting the “cut government spending” horn and pointing fingers at states that have relatively strong solar policies as prime targets of ill-advised socialist expenditures and “earmarks”. After all, the more these people toot, the more they are amplified by the mainstream media. That’s mainly because a few billionaires are motivated to force feed political opinion into your eyes and ears, but we’ll save that story for another day.
Maybe the red state political establishment has become accustomed to battling for their disproportional share of handouts from the Fed. While they could be drafting new clean energy policy to spur growth in a new industry and create more jobs, there appears to be more interest in fighting for solid positioning in the dirty oil, coal and gas pork trough.
What to conclude from all of this? Well, for one I should not have been surprised to learn Glenn Beck was urging his followers to boycott the census a few months back. Maybe he didn’t want them to find out their state coffers continue to be lined with Democrat dollars. On the other hand, even without free subsidies from other states, our country’s big blue cash cows are spearheading the nascent solar industry movement. Good on them!
No matter where you live or who your representatives are, we urge you to at least get a quote for solar energy on your home. You may be very surprised how quickly you can be in the green.