HVAC Glossary

Solar Load Shifting

Last updated: March 11, 2026

Solar load shifting is the practice of timing household electricity consumption to coincide with periods of high solar generation. This technique reduces grid dependence and maximizes on-site solar utilization without requiring battery storage. Load shifting can increase effective solar self consumption by 15% to 25% through strategic scheduling of appliances and equipment.

Technical Details

Load shifting works by deferring non-urgent electrical loads to peak solar generation hours, typically 10 AM to 3 PM. Common candidates include water heating, pool pumping, electric vehicle charging, and laundry operations. Smart thermostats and programmable controls enable automated load shifting based on real-time solar output data. This approach requires minimal hardware investment beyond monitoring systems and smart controllers.

Practical Significance

Load shifting reduces demand charges and extends solar payback periods by 2 to 4 years in many markets. It provides immediate savings without capital investment in battery systems. When combined with time-of-use rate structures, load shifting generates additional bill reductions by avoiding peak pricing periods. Industrial and commercial facilities achieve greater savings through coordinated load shifting across multiple processes.

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