Direct Capital Costs
A direct capital cost represents an expense for a specific piece of equipment or installation service that applies in year zero of the cash flow.
Note: Because Solar Advisor uses only the Total Installed Cost value in cash flow calculations, how you distribute costs among the different direct capital cost categories does not affect the final results.
Site Improvements ($/m2)
A cost per square meter of total reflective area from the Heliostat Field page to account for expenses related to site preparation and other equipment not included in the heliostat field cost category.
Heliostat Field ($/m2)
A cost per square meter of total reflective area from the Heliostat Field page to account for expenses related to installation of the heliostats, including heliostat parts, field wiring, drives, labor, and equipment.
Balance of Plant ($/kWe)
A cost per electric kilowatt of power cycle nameplate capacity from the Power Cycle page expenses related to installation of the balance-of-plant components and controls, and construction of buildings, including labor and equipment.
Power Block ($/kWe)
A cost per electric kilowatt of power cycle nameplate capacity from the Power Cycle page expenses related to installation of the power block components, including labor and equipment. The Power Block and Balance of Plant costs are rolled together into a single number for calculation purposes.
Storage System ($/kWht)
Cost per thermal megawatt-hour of storage capacity from the Thermal Storage page to account for the installation of a thermal energy storage system, including equipment and labor.
Fixed Solar Field Cost ($)
An additional fixed cost in dollars to include as a direct cost that is not accounted for by any of the above categories.
Fixed Tower Cost ($)
A fixed cost to account for tower construction, materials and labor costs. The fixed tower cost serves as the multiplier in the tower cost scaling equation shown below.
Tower Cost Scaling Exponent
Solar Advisor uses the tower cost in the optimization calculations. The tower cost scaling exponent defines the nonlinear relationship between tower cost and tower height. See Total Tower Cost below.
Total Tower Cost ($)
Total Tower Cost = Fixed Tower Costs x exp (Tower Height x Tower Cost Scaling Exponent)
Receiver Reference Cost ($)
The cost per receiver reference area to account for receiver installation costs, including labor and equipment.
Receiver Reference Area (m2)
The receiver area on which the receiver reference cost is based.
Receiver Cost Scaling Exponent
Solar Advisor uses the receiver cost in the optimization calculations. The receiver cost scaling exponent defines the nonlinear relationship between receiver cost and receiver area based on the reference cost conditions provided.
Total Receiver Cost ($)
Receiver Cost = Receiver Reference Cost x (Receiver Area / Receiver Reference Area ) ^ Receiver Cost Scaling Exponent.
Contingency (%)
A percentage of the sum of the site improvements, heliostat field, balance of plant, power block, storage system, fixed solar field, total tower, and total receiver costs to account for expected uncertainties in direct cost estimates.
Total Direct Cost ($)
The sum of improvements, site improvements, heliostat field, balance of plant, power block, storage system, fixed solar field, total tower, total receiver, and contingency costs.
Indirect Capital Costs
An indirect cost is typically one that cannot be identified with a specific piece of equipment or installation service, and may include all other costs that are built into the price of the system, such as profit, overhead, and shipping costs. Depending on the purpose of your analysis, you may decide to distribute profit among the direct cost categories or include them as a single value in an indirect category.
Note: Because Solar Advisor uses only the total installed cost value in cash flow calculations, how you distribute costs among the different indirect capital cost categories does not affect the final results.
Engineer, Procure, Construct (% and $)
Costs associated with design and construction of the project, calculated as the sum of a percentage of Total Direct Cost and a fixed cost.
Project, Land, Miscellaneous (% and $)
Costs associated with profit, overhead (including marketing), permitting, or shipping, calculated as the sum of a percentage of Total Direct Cost and a fixed cost.
Sales Tax (%)
Percentage of direct costs to which sales tax applies, calculated by multiplying Total Direct Cost by the sales tax rate from the Financials page and the percentage that you specify.
Total Indirect Cost ( $)
The sum of Engineer-Procure-Construct costs, Project-Land-Miscellaneous costs, and sales tax.
Total Installed Cost
The total installed cost is the project's investment cost that applies in year zero of the project cash flow. Solar Advisor uses this value to calculate loan amounts and debt interest payments based on inputs on the Financing page, and to calculate tax credit and incentive payment amounts for incentive based tax credits and incentives defined on the Tax Credit Incentives page and Payment Incentives pages.
Total Installed Cost ($)
The sum of total direct cost and total indirect cost.
Total Installed Cost per Capacity ($/Wdc or $/kW)
Total installed cost divided by the total system rated or nameplate capacity. This value is provided for reference only and not used in cash flow calculations.
Operation and Maintenance Costs
Operation and Maintenance (O&M) costs represent annual expenditures on equipment and services that occur after the system is installed. Solar Advisor allows you to enter O&M costs in three ways: Fixed annual, fixed by capacity, and variable by generation. O&M costs are reported on the project cash flow.
For each O&M cost category, you can specify an annual escalation rate to represent an expected annual increase in O&M cost above the annual inflation rate specified on the Financing page. For an escalation rate of zero, the O&M cost in years two and later is the year one cost adjusted for inflation. For a non-zero escalation rate, the O&M cost in years two and later is the year one cost adjusted for inflation plus escalation.
For expenses such as component replacements that occur in particular years, you can use an annual schedule to assign costs to individual years. See below for details.
Fixed Annual Cost ($/yr)
A fixed annual cost applied to each year in the project cash flow.
Fixed Cost by Capacity ($/kW-yr)
A fixed annual cost proportional to the system's rated or nameplate capacity.
Variable Cost by Generation ($/MWh)
A variable annual cost proportional to the system's total annual electrical output in AC megawatt-hours. The annual energy output depends on either the performance model's calculated first year value and the degradation rate specified on the Annual Performance page, or on an annual schedule of costs, depending on the option chosen.
Fossil Fuel Cost ($/MMBtu)
The cost per million British thermal units for fuel. Solar Advisor uses the conversion factor 1 MWh = 3.413 MMBtu. Applies only to the generic fossil, CSP trough, and CSP tower systems. The photovoltaic and CSP dish models ignore the fuel cost input variable. (When the fossil fill fraction variable on the Thermal Storage page for either of the trough models or the power tower model is greater than zero, the systems consume fuel for backup energy.)
Note. For information on water consumption and other operation and maintenance costs and requirements for concentrating parabolic trough systems, see the Troughnet website: http://www.nrel.gov/csp/troughnet/power_plant_systems.html. For information on operation and maintenance costs for photovoltaic systems, see the California Energy Commission's online Distributed Energy Resource guide http://www.energy.ca.gov/distgen/economics/operation.html.
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