| dbo:abstract | 
	Solar power in Vermont provides almost 11% of the state's in-state electricity production as of 2018. A 2009 study indicated that distributed solar on rooftops can provide 18% of all electricity used in Vermont. A 2012 estimate suggests that a typical 5 kW system costing $25,000 before credits and utility savings will pay for itself in 10 years, and generate a profit of $34,956 over the rest of its 25-year life. Net metering is available for up to at least 500 kW generation, but is capped at 15% of utilities peak demand. Excess generation is rolled over each month but is lost once each year. Group net metering is also allowed. Vermont is given an A for net metering and a C for interconnection. A feed-in tariff was created in 2009, but is limited to 50 MW and is fully subscribed. The cap increases by 5 to 10 MW/year starting in 2013 until it reaches 127.5 MW in 2022. It is available for solar, wind, methane, and biomass. Seven solar projects are receiving payments, of $0.30/kWh, for 25 years. (en) | 
| dbo:thumbnail |  | 
| dbo:wikiPageExternalLink |  | 
| dbo:wikiPageID |  | 
| dbo:wikiPageLength | 
	30393 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) | 
| dbo:wikiPageRevisionID |  | 
| dbo:wikiPageWikiLink |  | 
| dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate |  | 
| dct:subject |  | 
| rdf:type |  | 
| rdfs:comment | 
	Solar power in Vermont provides almost 11% of the state's in-state electricity production as of 2018. A 2009 study indicated that distributed solar on rooftops can provide 18% of all electricity used in Vermont. A 2012 estimate suggests that a typical 5 kW system costing $25,000 before credits and utility savings will pay for itself in 10 years, and generate a profit of $34,956 over the rest of its 25-year life. (en) | 
| rdfs:label | 
	Solar power in Vermont (en) | 
| rdfs:seeAlso |  | 
| owl:sameAs |  | 
| prov:wasDerivedFrom |  | 
| foaf:depiction |  | 
| foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf |  | 
| is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
 of |  | 
| is foaf:primaryTopic
 of |  |