IKEA will start selling residential solar panels presently at its stores in Britain, the first step in its plan to bring renewable energy to the mainstream market worldwide in near future the support supplied to the electric cars also.
The company started selling solar panels made by China’s Hanergy in its store in Southampton on Monday. It will sell them in the rest of Britain in coming months, it said.
A standard, all-black 3.36 kilowatt system for a semi-detached home will cost 5,700 British pounds ($9,200) and will include an in-store consultation and design service as well as installation, maintenance and energy monitoring service.
“In the past few years the prices on solar panels have dropped, so it’s a really good price now,” IKEA Chief Sustainability Officer Steve Howard told The Associated Press. “It’s the right time to go for the consumers.”
The solar panel investment will be paid off in about seven years for an average home owner in Britain, Howard said.
“If you are going to be in your house that long, your energy will be free after seven years,” he said.
Some retailers in the U.S., including the Home Depot and Lowe’s, already sell solar panels. But in other parts of the world, consumers often have to research a myriad specialist firms before making a purchase.
Howard said IKEA aims to launch the products in other countries
eventually. It picked Britain as its test market because it has the
right combination of mid-level electricity prices and government-sponsored financial incentives that make investing in solar energy attractive to consumers.
“This is a market by market decision,” he said.





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