PV Curtailment Reduction Calculator

Quantify lost generation and model practical recovery options. Compare battery capture, smarter controls, and grid limits. Turn curtailed solar into measurable annual savings.

Enter your site details to estimate curtailment reduction, recovered energy, and financial impact. Results will appear here after you submit.

Inputs

Used for sanity-check context and reporting.
Your typical yearly PV generation.
Current curtailed share of production.
Goal after mitigation measures.
Grid constraint affecting curtailment.
Portion of recovered energy used onsite.
Set 0 if no storage is used.
Applies to stored-and-released energy.
Typical average usable cycling level.
Extra recovery from dispatch and scheduling.
Extra recovery from inverter and firmware changes.
Value of onsite consumption (per kWh).
Value of exported energy (per kWh).
One-time cost for upgrades and controls.
Ongoing costs tied to the solution.
Period used for NPV calculation.
Time value of money for NPV.
Used to estimate avoided emissions.
Reset

Example data

Use this table as a starting point, then replace with your site values.

PV kW Annual kWh Baseline % Target % Battery kWh Cycles/day Retail price Export price
50 80,000 8 2 80 0.6 0.18 0.11
250 410,000 12 4 300 0.8 0.16 0.08
10 15,000 5 1 10 0.4 0.22 0.12

Tip: If you do not have a battery, set battery capacity to 0.

Formula used

  • Baseline curtailed energy: BaselineCurt = AnnualProduction × (BaselineCurt% ÷ 100)
  • Target curtailed energy: TargetCurt = AnnualProduction × (TargetCurt% ÷ 100)
  • Theoretical reduction: ReductionTheoretical = max(0, BaselineCurt − TargetCurt)
  • Battery capture capacity: BatteryCap = BatterykWh × CyclesPerDay × 365 × RoundTripEff
  • Estimated recoverable energy: Recoverable = min(ReductionTheoretical, min(BaselineCurt, BatteryCap) × (1 + Gains%))
  • Recovered value: Value = (Recoverable×SelfShare×RetailPrice) + (Recoverable×(1−SelfShare)×ExportPrice)
  • NPV: NPV = −Capex + Σ(NetAnnualBenefit ÷ (1 + r)^t)

These equations are simplified and are best used for planning and comparison.

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter your annual PV production and current curtailment percentage.
  2. Set a realistic target curtailment after upgrades or controls.
  3. If using storage, enter battery size, efficiency, and expected cycling.
  4. Choose how much recovered energy is used onsite versus exported.
  5. Add prices, costs, and analysis settings to see payback and NPV.
  6. Click Calculate, then download CSV or PDF if needed.

Curtailment as a measurable loss

PV curtailment occurs when available solar generation is intentionally reduced because of export limits, voltage constraints, congestion, or operational rules. This calculator converts that operational issue into annual kilowatt-hours, so you can compare sites, seasons, and mitigation options. Start with annual production and a baseline curtailment percentage. The resulting curtailed energy represents value you are already paying to produce, but not capturing.

Drivers and controllable levers

Not all curtailment is fixed. Storage can absorb surplus energy during constrained hours and release it later. Smart controls can shift flexible loads, schedule charging, and reduce clipping by improving dispatch. Inverter upgrades or firmware changes may widen operating envelopes or improve ramping behavior. In this model, controls and inverter improvements are represented as a gain applied to the captured portion, helping you test conservative scenarios.

Estimating recoverable energy

Recoverable energy is bounded by two constraints: the theoretical reduction between baseline and target curtailment, and the practical capture capacity of the chosen solution. Battery capture capacity is estimated from battery size, expected cycles per day, and round-trip efficiency. The calculator then limits recovery to what storage can realistically cycle each year and applies your gains. Output is split into onsite and exported kilowatt-hours for valuation.

Valuing recovered kilowatt-hours

Each recovered kilowatt-hour is priced based on where it is used. Onsite consumption is valued at the retail electricity price, while exported energy is valued at the export compensation rate. By adjusting the self-consumption share, you can explore how adding flexible loads or improving demand alignment increases value. Annual O&M is subtracted to compute net annual benefit, creating a consistent yearly cashflow estimate.

Interpreting payback and NPV

Simple payback divides investment cost by net annual benefit, which is intuitive but ignores timing. Net present value discounts benefits over the selected analysis period using your discount rate, enabling comparisons across projects with different lifetimes and risk profiles. If NPV is positive and payback matches your requirements, curtailment reduction can be an upgrade. Use the chart to sanity-check magnitudes before relying on the decision confidently.

FAQs

1) What is PV curtailment in practical terms?

It is generation your system could produce but is reduced by grid or equipment constraints. Common causes include export caps, voltage rise, inverter clipping, or utility dispatch requirements.

2) Why does storage help reduce curtailment?

A battery can capture surplus energy during constrained hours and deliver it later when export or onsite demand allows. The model estimates capture using battery size, cycling, and efficiency.

3) How should I choose self-consumption share?

Use measured load data if available. If you plan to add flexible loads like EV charging or cooling, increase the share to reflect more onsite use of recovered energy.

4) What do the gain inputs represent?

They represent incremental recovery from better dispatch, controls, or inverter improvements beyond storage alone. Use modest values for conservative cases and higher values only with evidence.

5) Does the export limit directly change the math?

Export limit provides context because it often drives curtailment, but hourly shapes matter. Use baseline and target curtailment percentages to reflect the effective outcome of the constraint.

6) How accurate are the results?

This is a planning tool. Accuracy depends on hourly production and load profiles, control strategy, and interconnection rules. Validate with interval data or a detailed simulation before investing.

Practical note: Curtailment drivers vary (export caps, voltage, congestion, inverter clipping). Use measured site data when possible, and confirm assumptions with your installer or interconnection provider.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.