Close Menu
Energy Mag
  • Home
  • News
  • Solar
  • Wind Power
  • Baseload
  • Storage
  • Efficiency
What's On

Vattenfall hires Statkraft’s offshore wind boss Flood

November 13, 2025

‘Complex battles, a strategic wildcard’: Why this UK wind auction is like no other

November 13, 2025

Shell ScotWind exit dubbed ‘natural attrition’ but calls for action grow

November 13, 2025

RWE reveals plan for US offshore wind projects hit by Trump’s war on sector

November 13, 2025

How will wind fare the next decade? IEA report explains in six graphs and one map

November 13, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Energy Mag
  • Home
  • News
  • Solar
  • Wind Power
  • Baseload
  • Storage
  • Efficiency
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Energy Mag
Home » The reality of residential solar
Storage

The reality of residential solar

staffBy staffOctober 13, 20252 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The U.S. residential solar industry has seen better days.

Electricity bill credits in rooftop solar-saturated states like California are a fraction of what they once were. Tariffs have made components more expensive, just as federal tax credits are set to sunset. Anti-renewables legislation is casting a long and dark shadow, and a series of bankruptcies among established names in the space has cast further doubt on whether the dollars and cents still make dollars and sense.

But at least one man believes residential solar can reach a point of profitability. In fact, he’s actively proving it.

TJ Rogers, the CEO of SunPower, has led an illustrious career in the solar and semiconductor space. An outspoken free-market evangelist, Rodgers possesses a clear vision of what he believes an American home solar company should be.

“If you apply quality principles to a company, the savings you will get from the company will overwhelm whatever it costs to have a quality department applying those principles,” Rodgers shared. “Quality is free.”

He also has strong opinions about the government’s role within free markets.

“Why do Americans pay $3 per watt for solar, and Europeans pay a buck-fifty a watt?”, Rodgers questioned, recalling a recently penned op-ed article. “Why in the land of the free, even with a subsidy that should nominally reduce the cost? And the answer is, the government is in there, screwing everything up all the time. They’re doing it again.”

In this episode of the Factor This podcast, Rodgers shares his recipe for success with host Paul Gerke, detailing the challenges and opportunities in the residential market and solar at large. Topics of discussion include:

Like, subscribe, and let us know what you think of the Factor This podcast!

Related Articles

Ohio solar supporters, farmers eager for proposed community power pilot

November 4, 2025

SolarEdge reaches 500 MWh of VPP storage capacity across its North America portfolio

October 30, 2025

Nextracker’s steel module frames to be used at T1 Energy’s 5-GW solar manufacturing facility

October 16, 2025

Catalyze, Enel, Fourth Power, Jupiter Power, Nexamp, Sol Systems

September 19, 2025
Editors Picks

‘Complex battles, a strategic wildcard’: Why this UK wind auction is like no other

November 13, 2025

Shell ScotWind exit dubbed ‘natural attrition’ but calls for action grow

November 13, 2025

RWE reveals plan for US offshore wind projects hit by Trump’s war on sector

November 13, 2025

How will wind fare the next decade? IEA report explains in six graphs and one map

November 13, 2025
Latest Articles

RWE not writing down US offshore wind projects: ‘Will be built later’

November 12, 2025

SSE joins Iberdrola in networks dash as grids outgun wind in new strategy

November 12, 2025

What Shell’s no-sale means for floating’s big hope ScotWind

November 12, 2025
© 2025 Energy Mag. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.