When most people think about commercial solar, they think about kilowatt-hour savings — offsetting the energy consumed by a facility with clean power generated on-site. That math is real and important. But it misses what is often the larger opportunity, especially for businesses operating in PG&E, SCE, or SDG&E territory: demand charge reduction.
For many commercial and industrial facilities in California, demand charges represent 30 to 50 percent of the total electricity bill. Unlike energy charges, which are based on how much power you consume over a billing period, demand charges are based on your single highest moment of power draw during any 15-minute interval in the month. One spike — from an HVAC compressor cycling on during a hot afternoon, a production line ramping up, or an EV fleet plugging in simultaneously — can set your demand charge for the entire billing period.
Why solar alone doesn't solve the demand problem
Solar panels produce power based on sunlight availability, not your facility's load profile. Your peak demand may hit at 5 PM when solar production is declining, or on an overcast afternoon when panels are underperforming. Even a large solar array can leave demand charges largely untouched because it can't guarantee power delivery at the exact moments your demand peaks.
This is where battery storage changes the equation entirely.
How battery storage shaves demand peaks
A properly sized and programmed commercial battery system monitors your facility's power draw in real time. When consumption begins approaching a demand threshold, the battery discharges to offset grid draw, effectively capping your peak demand at a predetermined level. This is called peak shaving, and it's the single most impactful strategy for reducing commercial electricity costs in California.
The math in practice
Consider a 50,000 sq ft commercial facility in PG&E territory on the B-20 rate schedule. If the building's peak demand is 200 kW and a battery system reduces that peak to 120 kW, the demand charge savings alone can exceed $2,000 per month — roughly $24,000 per year. Over a 15-year battery life, that's $360,000 in demand charge savings, often exceeding the total cost of the battery system.
Beyond peak shaving: stacking revenue streams
Demand charge management is the primary value driver, but modern commercial battery systems can generate additional returns through several complementary strategies:
- Time-of-use arbitrage: Charging the battery during off-peak hours (when electricity is cheapest) and discharging during on-peak hours (when rates are highest), capturing the spread between rate periods.
- Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP): California's SGIP provides upfront rebates for battery storage systems, significantly reducing the net cost of installation. Some projects qualify for rebates covering 25 to 50 percent of the system cost.
- Backup power and resilience: The same battery that shaves demand peaks provides critical backup during grid outages — an increasingly valuable capability as PSPS (Public Safety Power Shutoff) events and extreme weather become more frequent in California.
- Federal Investment Tax Credit: Commercial battery systems installed alongside solar qualify for the 30% ITC, with potential bonus adders for domestic content and energy communities.
Sizing the system correctly
The key to maximizing demand charge ROI is proper system sizing. An undersized battery won't meaningfully reduce peaks. An oversized system wastes capital on capacity you don't need. The optimal configuration depends on several facility-specific factors:
- Your historical load profile — specifically the frequency, magnitude, and duration of demand peaks
- Your utility rate schedule and the specific demand charge structure (some rates have tiered demand charges, time-of-use demand charges, or both)
- Existing or planned solar generation capacity
- Critical load requirements for backup power scenarios
- Available physical space and electrical infrastructure
At Symmetric Energy, we model every commercial battery project against at least 12 months of interval meter data to identify the optimal system size. We don't estimate — we simulate the battery's performance against your actual load profile and rate schedule to project savings with confidence.
What the payback looks like
For most commercial facilities in California, a properly designed solar-plus-storage system achieves a payback period of 4 to 7 years when demand charge savings, energy savings, incentives, and tax credits are all factored in. The exact timeline depends on your rate schedule, load profile, and system configuration — but the economics are strong and getting stronger as utility rates continue to rise.
The facilities we see with the fastest payback tend to have peaky load profiles — think cold storage, manufacturing, or properties with large HVAC systems. If your demand charges are more than 30% of your bill, battery storage almost certainly makes economic sense.
Getting started
The first step is understanding your current demand charge exposure. If you have access to your utility bills, look for the demand charges line item — it's usually measured in dollars per kilowatt ($/kW). If demand charges represent a significant portion of your bill, a detailed analysis of your interval data can reveal exactly how much a battery system could save.
We offer complimentary commercial energy assessments that include demand charge analysis, solar-plus-storage modeling, and a preliminary ROI projection. No sales pressure — just an honest look at whether the economics work for your facility.