Clouds gather. The sky grows dark. A solar homeowner may naturally wonder: How much energy can my solar system generate during a cloudy day?
While of course solar panels need sunlight to produce energy, it’s important to learn how cloudy conditions can affect the efficiency of solar energy generation and how factors such as partial shade can impact your solar system power output.
Yes, solar panels still work in cloudy weather — they just might generate less power, depending upon the quality and efficiency of your panels.
Anyone who has gotten sunburned on a cloudy day knows that solar radiation penetrates clouds. For that same reason, solar panels can still produce electricity on cloudy days. But depending on the cloud cover and the quality of the solar panels, efficiency can drop to anywhere from 10 to 25 percent of the energy output seen on a sunny day.
Fortunately, SunPower® solar panels, with a record-breaking efficiency of more than 22 percent (highest efficiency panels commercially available1 ), use cells with a unique one-of-a-kind design that capture a broader range of the sun’s light — including red and blue wavelengths. They make more energy than conventional panels on a cloudy day, making them a good choice for cloudy climates or if trees partially shade your roof during certain times of day. We also design into our cells a “backside mirror” that uses a thin layer of aluminum that bounces some of the light photons that are not absorbed on their first pass through a cell back into the cell to have a second chance for absorption. This results in greater output of electrons from the same input of light.
Solar PV panels work by converting sunlight to direct current (DC) and then an inverter turns that into alternating current (AC), which is the type of power most houses run on. If it’s so sunny that your solar system produces far more electricity than you need, that AC power then goes back to the grid to be used by the utility, which in many areas offers the homeowner a credit via net metering.
Net metering policies, which vary by state, generally give you credit for excess power you produce, and you can draw on that credit at night or when your system produces less due to cloudy weather.
Here are a few important things to remember:
It doesn’t hurt to keep in mind that Germany — a leader in renewable energy that’s famous for its lack of sunlight – accounts for about 25 percent of the world’s solar power output and achieved its strongest growth in half a decade last year, according to a recent Greentech Media article. That’s good evidence that going solar is about saving on your energy costs and helping the planet — not about the weather.
The bottom line is that a cloudy day shouldn’t darken anyone’s view toward considering switching to solar power.
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Target Solar Power – Staten Island’s Solar Energy Company
TargetSolarPower.com
(646) 450-4977
1186 Hylan Blvd, Staten Island, NY 10305