Tesla’s solar roof tiles now on sale worldwide

The electric car maker's energy-producing house shingles look virtually the same as traditional slate and terracotta tiles, albeit a more expensive option.

A house with Tesla's new terracotta solar roof tiles. Customers worldwide can now order a solar roof on Tesla's website. The solar tiles contain photovoltaic cells that are invisible from the street. Courtesy Tesla
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Tesla has begun taking orders for its transformative new solar roof.

The pricing is competitive, and it marks the final piece in Elon Musk’s vision for a grand unification of his clean-energy ambitions combining solar power, home batteries, and electric cars.

“These are really the three legs of the stool for a sustainable energy future,” Mr Musk said. “Solar power going to a stationary battery pack so you have power at night, and then charging an electric vehicle … you can scale that to all the world’s demand.”

Tesla has opened up its online store and is taking US$1,000 deposits for two of four options unveiled in October: a smooth black glass; and textured-glass roof tiles. From most viewing angles, the slick shingles look like standard roof materials, but they allow light to pass through from above onto a solar cell embedded beneath the tempered surface. The first installations will begin in the United States in June, although orders are being accepted from countries around the world for 2018.

The pricing is less than many analysts were expecting. When taking into account the energy savings and lifetime cost of ownership (Tesla guarantees it will outlast your home) it is an affordable option in many areas of the country.

“The pricing is better than I expected, better than everyone expected,” said Hugh Bromley, a solar analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Tesla’s all-in cost for active solar tiles is about $42 per square foot, Mr Bromley said. Inactive tiles will cost $11 per square foot, and Tesla says to expect an overall average of about $22 per square foot.

But they are not yet for everyone. The solar roof still comes with a considerable upfront price tag. Replacing the roof of a 2,000 square-foot home in New York state with 40 per cent coverage of active solar tiles and battery backup for night-time us would cost about $50,000 after federal tax credits. It would pay for itself with $64,000 of energy produced over 30 years, according to Tesla’s website calculator.

In this case, a Tesla solar roof is not only more expensive upfront than a traditional roof – contradicting a claim Mr Musk made last year – but it is potentially more expensive upfront than a traditional roof with solar panels on top, too. That is because a Tesla solar roof may require more square feet of active solar generation to satisfy the same energy needs as traditional solar panels. Even though the Panasonic solar cells Tesla uses are some of the best in the industry, they must be spaced further apart than on traditional panels to account for the edges of each shingle, Mr Bromley said. Tesla did not disclose the electricity output per square foot or the price per watt of power capacity.

All told, Mr Bromley figured, a traditional solar setup might be 30 per cent cheaper than the Tesla roof. But Tesla’s will look better and come with a lifetime warranty, whereas normal roofs are typically replaced every few decades. “A 30 per cent premium could well be acceptable,” Mr Bromley said, especially for eager customers like Tesla’s car-buyers who are willing to pay $35,000 for a base version of its upcoming Model 3.

* Bloomberg

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