Massachusetts: The Commonwealth of Solar

The non-residential market continues to pave the way for the Bay State.

Massachusetts is known for many things: the first Thanksgiving, an unwavering dedication to Dunkin' Donuts coffee, Greentech Media’s global headquarters, Boston accents, and the best clam "chowdah" in the country. It might soon add another defining trait: solar energy.

According to the recently released U.S. Solar Market Insight report, Massachusetts installed 237 megawatts of solar PV in 2013, doubling its cumulative capacity. That puts the state in fourth place in the United States, ranking behind only California, Arizona, and North Carolina.

Half of all installations in Massachusetts occurred in the fourth quarter of the year, led by the non-residential (i.e., commercial) sector with 95 megawatts installed. In fact, Massachusetts installed more non-residential solar last quarter than did any other state in the U.S., driven in large part by the SREC I interconnection deadline of December 31, 2013.



Source: U.S. Solar Market Insight

According to the U.S. PV Leaderboard, Borrego Solar Systems, Citizens Energy, and Gehrlicher Solar America Corporation were the leading non-residential installers in the state through the first three quarters of the year. GTM Research is still crunching the installer share numbers from the record-breaking fourth quarter.

GTM Research’s Utility PV Market Tracker monitors solar projects from Pittsfield to Provincetown, and all municipalities in between. We tapped into the tool to pull out the top five operational solar projects in Massachusetts, all of which are commercial.



Source: GTM Research Utility PV Market Tracker

 

The U.S. Solar Market Insight report outlines three factors that will help Massachusetts maintain high installation numbers in the first half of 2014.

“Ultimately, what Massachusetts is doing is putting in place a structure that is going to create a sustainable market moving forward,” said SEIA CEO Rhone Resch in last week’s Energy Gang podcast.

Cumulatively, Massachusetts now has 440 megawatts of PV capacity, three-quarters of which are non-residential. Almost everyone in the Bay State agrees: solar is wicked cool. 

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For more insight into Massachusetts and 29 other states’ solar markets, purchase the full U.S. Solar Market Insight report.