Writing about aerospace and electronic systems, particularly with defense applications. Areas of interest include radar, sonar, space, satellites, unmanned plaforms, hypersonic platforms, and artificial intelligence.
Genome-wide sequencing of skeletal fragments embedded in
the famous 19th-century body casts overturns long-held assumptions
about who Vesuvius killed — and reveals an Imperial Roman city far more
cosmopolitan than the family portraits we have imagined for 150 years.
BOTTOM LINE UP FRONT —
In November 2024, an
international team led by the University of Florence, Harvard Medical
School, and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
reported in Current Biology the first genome-wide ancient DNA
recovered from skeletal fragments embedded in Pompeii's plaster casts
[1, 14]. Of 14 casts sampled during ongoing restoration of 86 specimens,
five yielded sufficient nuclear DNA for genome-wide analysis. The
genetic results contradict three iconic interpretations: the "mother and
child" of the House of the Golden Bracelet was an unrelated adult male
holding an unrelated child; the "embracing sisters" of the House of the
Cryptoporticus included at least one male and were not maternally
related; and four victims long presented as a nuclear family at the
Golden Bracelet shared no first-, second-, or third-degree biological
kinship. All five sequenced individuals derive most of their ancestry
from the eastern Mediterranean — chiefly Anatolian and Levantine
Neolithic farming populations — consistent with parallel results from
Imperial Rome and confirming the cosmopolitan, mobile character of the
Roman Empire in the first century CE. The findings do not erase a
tragedy; they correct a Victorian-era story that researchers themselves
now describe as "modern assumptions about gendered behaviors" projected
onto the dead.
A morning in autumn, 79 CE
The traditional date for the eruption of Mount Vesuvius — August 24,
79 CE — comes from a single source: a letter written by Pliny the
Younger to the historian Tacitus roughly a quarter century after the
event. That date has been steadily eroded by physical evidence. Autumn
fruits, heavier clothing on victims, a coin in the House of the Golden
Bracelet whose mint date may post-date August, and most strikingly a
charcoal graffito found in 2018 in Regio V dated XVI K(alendas) Nov(embris)
— October 17 — together point to a late-October eruption, most often
given as October 24–25, 79 CE [1, 2]. The August date persists in
popular accounts (and in the YouTube transcript that prompted this
article) because the surviving medieval manuscripts of Pliny preserve
it, and because a 2022 reassessment by Pedar Foss of the manuscript
tradition has reopened, rather than closed, the debate [13]. The Pompeii
Archaeological Park itself has oscillated. What is no longer in dispute
is that the city died in a single day's worth of sequential pyroclastic
events.
The killing mechanism has also been revised. For more than a century,
ash suffocation was the standard textbook cause of death.
Multidisciplinary work by Giuseppe Mastrolorenzo and colleagues at
Italy's National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology, beginning with
a 2010 PLOS One paper, demonstrated that the pyroclastic density
currents (PDCs) that reached Pompeii — roughly 10 km from the vent —
carried temperatures sufficient to cause instantaneous thermal death
even inside buildings [3]. Pompeii's surges struck with temperatures
estimated between roughly 250 °C and 300 °C; closer in, at Herculaneum
and Oplontis, peripheral surge temperatures reached 500–600 °C. The
contorted, "pugilistic" postures preserved in the casts are now
interpreted as cadaveric heat spasm, not protracted agony.
That thermal picture was sharpened again in February 2025, when Guido
Giordano of Roma Tre University and colleagues published in Scientific Reports
the calorimetric analysis of vitrified organic matter recovered from
inside the skull and spinal column of a young man found in the Collegium
Augustalium at Herculaneum [4]. Differential scanning calorimetry
indicated his brain tissue had been heated above 510 °C and then cooled
rapidly enough to bypass crystallization — the first reported instance
of natural high-temperature vitrification of soft animal tissue. The
team attributes the event to a brief, dilute, very hot ash cloud that
preceded the main pyroclastic flow. (Skepticism remains: Alexandra
Morton-Hayward of Oxford has questioned both the identification and the
thermal scenario.) For Pompeii's lower-altitude victims, however, the
killing was less exotic: hot enough, fast enough, fatal in seconds.
Fiorelli's invention — and its limits
The plaster casts themselves are an artifact of 19th-century method,
not of antiquity. Excavations of Pompeii began in 1748 under the Bourbon
kings of Naples but proceeded haphazardly until Giuseppe Fiorelli took
charge in 1863. Fiorelli realized that the cavities in the hardened ash
were the negative impressions of bodies whose soft tissue had
decomposed, and he devised the technique of pouring liquid plaster into
those voids through small bore-holes, then chipping away the surrounding
matrix. Roughly 104 casts were eventually produced from the estimated
1,000-plus victims recovered at the site.
What Fiorelli's technique did not do was preserve a complete
osteological record. When the Pompeii Archaeological Park began a
systematic restoration of 86 casts in 2015 and subjected 26 of them to
CT scanning or X-ray imaging, the results were sobering. None contained a
complete skeleton. Many had been "creatively restored" in the past —
bones removed, metal armatures inserted, postures adjusted. The Pilli et
al. paper notes dryly that the casts have served as "vehicles for
storytelling" and that "stylistic variations between casts in part
reflect aesthetic preferences of the periods in which they were made"
[5]. The most famous example: a "pregnant woman" whose distended abdomen
turned out, on imaging, to be bunched-up garments.
This means the genetic study did not have to overturn a settled
scientific record so much as a popular and museological one. The
narratives the new DNA contradicts were largely constructed, restored,
and curated; they were not derived from rigorous bioarchaeological
assessment.
What the sequencers actually did
The methodology, described in the Current Biology paper and
its STAR Methods supplement, is forensic in its caution [5]. Sampling
occurred at the Pompeii Archaeological Park during cast restoration,
accessing fragmented bone and teeth through pre-existing damage in the
casts rather than breaching them. Samples were processed at the
Molecular Anthropology Unit of the University of Florence — a dedicated
ancient-DNA clean facility — with outer surfaces mechanically abraded
and ultraviolet-irradiated to suppress modern contamination.
DNA extracts of the first set of six samples were quantified using
the Quantifiler Trio kit. Illumina sequencing libraries were prepared in
two formats: non-UDG-treated (preserving the deamination damage
patterns that authenticate ancient DNA) and partial-UDG-treated
(cleaner, suitable for capture). At Harvard Medical School, libraries
were enriched in solution for the mitochondrial genome plus roughly
3,000 nuclear screening SNPs, then for those that passed, for the
standard 1,237,207-SNP "1240K" capture panel. Sequencing ran on Illumina
MiSeq and NextSeq 500 instruments. Of 14 sampled casts, seven yielded
enough DNA to attempt 1240K capture; five produced data covered on more
than 50,000 SNPs and were retained for population genetic analysis [5].
For one individual — Cast 25 from the Villa of the Mysteries, the
best-preserved cast in the set — a lower premolar was also processed at
the University of Florida for strontium and oxygen isotope ratios via
thermal ionization and isotope-ratio mass spectrometry, providing a
complementary signal of childhood residency [5].
Three corrected stories
The House of the Golden Bracelet. Excavated in 1974,
this terraced villa in Insula 17 of Regio VI yielded four victims long
presented as a nuclear family fleeing toward the seafront. Cast 52 — the
adult on whom a 6.1-gram gold bracelet was found, giving the house its
name — was traditionally identified as a mother because of the bracelet
and because a young child (Cast 51) appeared to be on the adult's hip.
Cast 50, an adjacent adult, was cast as the father; Cast 53, a
four-year-old child found nearby, as a son. DNA quantification using the
Quantifiler Trio kit's Y-target showed all four were biologically male.
Where nuclear coverage was sufficient (Casts 51, 52, 53), the result is
unambiguous: XY karyotypes. Crucially, BREADR and KIN relatedness
analyses found no biological kinship up to the third degree among any of
the four. They were not a family. Mitochondrial haplogroups (U1a1 for
Cast 52; T2c1c for Cast 51; H for Cast 53) further rule out maternal
lineage [5]. The bracelet, in this revised reading, simply reflects what
historians of Roman material culture have long noted: high-status Roman
men wore gold.
The House of the Cryptoporticus. Excavated in 1914,
this house in Insula 6 of Regio I produced a pair of victims — Casts 21
and 22 — found in what archaeologists described as an embrace. The
narrative of "two sisters," "mother and daughter," or "lovers" entered
the popular literature without any osteological sex determination. CT
analysis estimated Cast 21 at 14–19 years old and Cast 22 as a young
adult, but produced no reliable sex attribution. Genetic analysis
succeeded for Cast 22, identifying him as male (Y-haplogroup J2b2a1,
mtDNA N1b1a1). Cast 21 yielded only mitochondrial data, but its
haplogroup R is incompatible with N1b1a1, ruling out a mother–daughter
relationship [5]. The intimacy of the pose, in other words, is a fact of
physical proximity in the moment of death, not of biological or
necessarily social relationship.
The Villa of the Mysteries. Cast 25, found alone on a
layer of ash on the upper floor of the farm wing with an iron ring,
five bronze coins, and a whip, has been interpreted since excavation as
the villa's faithful steward. Genetics confirmed male sex (Y-haplogroup
E1b1b1b1b, mtDNA H). Strontium analysis returned 87Sr/86Sr = 0.7084729 ±
0.00001, compatible with the southern Campanian plain (0.7075–0.7085);
δ¹⁸O of 26.77‰ VSMOW is consistent with coastal central Italy [5]. The
isotopes do not exclude a Pompeian childhood, but neither do they
require it; similar geochemical signatures recur across the
Mediterranean. His genome-wide ancestry suggests a mixed Eastern
Mediterranean and European origin, distinct from the other four
sequenced individuals.
"At two of the villas we analyzed, individuals
previously assumed to be women, in absence of careful osteological
assessment, were found to be genetically male... These discoveries
challenge longstanding interpretations, such as associating jewelry with
femininity or interpreting physical closeness as indicators of
biological relationships." — Pilli et al., Current Biology, 2024 [1, 12]
A cosmopolitan port
The ancestry results align with a picture that has been emerging from
ancient-genomics work on Imperial Rome over the past five years. On
principal component analysis projected against modern West Eurasian and
worldwide reference panels, the five Pompeian genomes plot away from
modern Italians, Iron Age Italians, and contemporaneous Etruscans, and
cluster instead with eastern Mediterranean and Levantine populations.
ADMIXTURE analysis at k=6 places them close to Imperial Roman
individuals from central Italy and to contemporaneous individuals from
the Aegean and Anatolia [5].
Formal qpAdm modeling using distal source populations attributes
48–75% of ancestry in each individual to Anatolian and/or Levantine
Neolithic farmers, with most of the remainder from Iranian/Zagros
Neolithic farmers. Cast 52 is an outlier: he is best modeled as roughly
58% Levantine Pre-Pottery Neolithic and 42% Iranian Neolithic, with no
Anatolian Neolithic contribution — a profile most parsimoniously
explained by recent Levantine ancestry, possibly Hellenistic Egyptian.
Phenotype prediction using HIrisPlex-S indicates Cast 52 likely had
black hair and dark skin; Casts 25, 51, and 53 likely had brown eyes
[5]. The single individual (Cast 52) with sufficient genome coverage to
evaluate runs of homozygosity (ROH) showed only one short ROH —
inconsistent with consanguinity or origin in a small founding
population, and consistent with a large, mixed urban gene pool.
This matches what historians have long inferred from inscriptions,
trade goods, and the writings of authors such as Strabo and Tacitus:
that Pompeii, a port at the mouth of the Sarno river, was a node in an
empire whose population was constantly redistributed by commerce,
military service, and the Roman institution of slavery. The previously
published whole genome from a victim recovered in the Casa del Fabbro [6] showed the same eastward-shifted ancestry, as did Antonio et al.'s landmark 2019 Science paper on the genomic history of Imperial Rome [7].
Pompeii is still being uncovered
The DNA paper landed in the middle of an unusually productive period
for Pompeii's archaeologists, working under park director Gabriel
Zuchtriegel — himself a co-author of the genetic study and the official
authority who must approve sampling. A non-exhaustive list of recent
finds:
January 2025: Excavation of an unusually large
private bathhouse complex in Regio IX, capable of accommodating around
30 people across calidarium, tepidarium, frigidarium, and a cold plunge
pool [8].
February 2025: Discovery of a near-life-size Dionysian frieze on the walls of a banquet room, depicting a Bacchic mystery cult procession.
April–May 2025: The "House of Helle and Phrixus"
yielded the remains of four victims, including a child, who had
barricaded a bedroom door with a bed frame against the inrushing lapilli
[9].
August 2025: Excavations in the Insula Meridionalis, published in the E-Journal of the Excavations of Pompeii,
documented sustained reoccupation of the city's upper floors and
cellars from the late first through fifth centuries CE — including a
ceramic lamp bearing an early Christian symbol — overturning the
long-held assumption that the site was simply abandoned after 79 CE [10,
11]. This finding has a forensic implication for the genetic and
isotopic work: not every organic trace recovered above the destruction
layer necessarily belongs to a 79 CE victim.
December 2025: Reconstruction work at the Casa del
Tiaso (House of the Thiasos) and CNN reporting indicated evidence of a
multi-story tower in a luxury residence — architecturally unprecedented
for Pompeii [15]. New finds at the Villa Poppaea at Oplontis,
traditionally associated with Nero's wife Poppaea Sabina, included a
peahen fresco, an Atellan-comedy theatrical mask of Pappus, and four
previously unknown rooms [16].
April 2026: The Pompeii park, in collaboration with
the University of Padua, released an AI-assisted facial reconstruction
of a victim from the Porta Stabia necropolis who had attempted to shield
his head from falling lapilli with a terracotta mortar [17].
None of these finds individually overturns the genetic results, but
together they reinforce the methodological argument the Pilli et al.
team made implicitly: any single interpretive lens — archaeological,
osteological, genetic, isotopic — gives a partial view. The casts read
as a tableau of Roman family life; the genomes read as a port city of
strangers; the new excavations read as an "invisible" post-eruption
favela. All three are true at once.
The instrument behind the result: Illumina sequencing in ancient DNA
The Pompeii study is one application of a now-standard toolkit —
instruments, chemistries, library protocols, capture reagents,
bioinformatic pipelines, and curated databases — that has reshaped the
study of the human past since roughly 2010. None of the science in the Current Biology
paper is possible without that infrastructure, and a few sentences of
background help explain both why the result took so long to obtain and
why it is trustworthy.
Sequencing chemistry. Illumina's platforms all use
sequencing-by-synthesis (SBS) with reversible-terminator chemistry,
originally developed at Solexa and acquired by Illumina in 2007. DNA
fragments are immobilized on a flow cell, amplified into clonal clusters
by bridge PCR, and then sequenced by sequential incorporation of
fluorescently labeled, 3′-blocked nucleotides; after each cycle the
fluorescent tag and the blocking group are cleaved and the next base
added [18]. Because each cluster is read in parallel, a single run
yields hundreds of millions to tens of billions of short reads —
typically 75–150 bp paired-end. The newer NovaSeq X and NextSeq
1000/2000 platforms run on Illumina's "XLEAP-SBS" chemistry, introduced
in 2023, which improves read quality and throughput per run.
Ancient DNA work, however, almost never needs the highest-throughput
platform. Endogenous DNA in archaeological bone is usually fragmented to
fewer than 100 base pairs, often fewer than 50, and is present in
vanishingly small quantities relative to environmental and microbial
DNA. The Pilli et al. study used the Illumina MiSeq for the initial mitochondrial-capture screen at Florence and the Illumina NextSeq 500
at Harvard for genome-scale capture data — both v2 chemistry,
paired-end 2 × 76 cycles [5]. These are mid-tier benchtop instruments,
well matched to the read lengths the input material can support.
Library preparation. Before any sequencing happens,
fragmented ancient DNA must be converted into a "library" — a set of
molecules with the right sequencing adapters at each end so the flow
cell can capture them. Two protocol families dominate aDNA work. The
double-stranded protocol of Meyer and Kircher (2010, Cold Spring Harbor Protocols)
is what Pompeii's samples received: blunt-end repair, ligation of two
adapters in a single reaction, and a fill-in step, with unique dual
indexes added by PCR for sample identification [19]. The Pilli team used
both fully untreated libraries (which preserve the C-to-T deamination
damage at fragment ends that authenticates ancient DNA) and
partial-UDG-treated libraries, in which uracil-DNA glycosylase removes
most damaged uracils from the interior of reads while leaving terminal
damage intact for authentication [5, 20]. The alternative
single-stranded protocol developed by Gansauge and Meyer at the Max
Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology (2013, refined 2017) uses
CircLigase II or T4 DNA ligase to attach adapters strand-by-strand,
recovering ultra-short fragments that double-stranded methods miss; it
is the workhorse for Neanderthal, Denisovan, and Sima de los Huesos
hominin sequencing [21]. Pompeii didn't need it — the bone fragments
inside the casts, while degraded, were young enough (ca. 1,950 years) to
yield workable double-stranded libraries.
In-solution SNP capture. Direct shotgun sequencing
of a Pompeian library would waste roughly 99% of reads on environmental
DNA. The standard solution since 2015 is targeted enrichment: synthetic
biotinylated RNA or DNA "baits" complementary to a panel of informative
human SNPs are mixed with the library, captured on streptavidin beads,
and washed clean of off-target sequence. The reference panel that the
Reich Lab established and that has been used in roughly 70% of all
published aDNA studies to date is the so-called 1240K reagent
— 1,237,207 SNPs across the autosomes plus targeted Y-chromosomal and
ancestry-informative sites [22]. The Pilli team used two rounds of 1240K
capture on partial-UDG libraries, after a smaller pre-screen on roughly
3,000 SNPs plus a mitochondrial bait set originally described by
Maricic et al. (2010) [5].
Because synthesizing 1240K baits in-house was prohibitively expensive
for most laboratories, in 2021 two companies — Daicel Arbor Biosciences
and Twist Bioscience — released commercial assays targeting the same
core SNPs. Rohland et al. (2022, Genome Research) benchmarked
all three on 27 common libraries and found Twist's panel produced the
most uniform coverage, the lowest allelic bias, and the cleanest
co-analysis with shotgun data; Harvard has since transitioned to Twist
for new captures [22]. The 1240K dataset, however, remains the lingua
franca of the field because it is what existing published genomes were
genotyped against.
Authenticating that the DNA is actually ancient.
Modern human DNA is the universal contaminant in any aDNA lab. Three
signals together establish authenticity: (1) the characteristic
deamination damage pattern — elevated C-to-T misincorporations at the 5′
end of reads (and G-to-A at the 3′ end for double-stranded libraries),
quantified by tools such as mapDamage 2.0 [23] and DamageProfiler; (2) X-chromosomal heterozygosity in putative males, estimated by ANGSD's
contamination module — Pilli et al. reported below 4% in the two
Pompeii samples with sufficient X-chromosome coverage [5]; and (3)
mitochondrial contamination estimates from contamMix or Schmutzi.
Reads also carry expected fragment-length distributions (most molecules
under 100 bp). Anything with full-length reads and no terminal damage
is contamination, and is rejected.
Bioinformatics pipelines. The Florence group used EAGER
(Efficient Ancient Genome Reconstruction; Peltzer et al. 2016) for read
processing in the mitochondrial-capture phase:
AdapterRemoval/Clip&Merge for adapter trimming and paired-end
merging, BWA-aln (a short-read-tuned variant of the Burrows-Wheeler
aligner) for mapping to the revised Cambridge Reference Sequence (rCRS)
using CircularMapper to handle mtDNA's circular topology, and DeDup for paired-end-aware duplicate removal [24]. The current community-standard successor is nf-core/eager,
a Nextflow pipeline released in 2021 with Docker/Singularity
containers, automated benchmarking, and integration with most major HPC
schedulers — designed so that any researcher in any institution can
reproduce a Reich Lab- or Max Planck-quality analysis from raw FASTQ to
genotype calls [25].
Downstream population-genetic analysis in the Pompeii paper used the Reich Lab's ADMIXTOOLS suite — qpAdm for fitting admixture models, qpWave for source-rank tests, and pre-computed f-statistics via qpfstats; EIGENSOFT/smartpca for principal component analysis; ADMIXTURE for unsupervised clustering at k = 2 through 15; KIN and BREADR for relatedness inference up to the third degree; hapROH for runs-of-homozygosity (which test for parental relatedness or small-population effects); sexDetERRmine for genetic sex determination from X/Y read ratios; and HIrisPlex-S for skin, eye, and hair pigmentation prediction [5]. Haplogrep3
handles mitochondrial haplogroup assignment against the PhyloTree
reference; Y-chromosomal haplogroups were assigned against the YFull
v8.09 phylogeny.
Reference databases. Two repositories anchor the
field. Raw sequencing reads from virtually all published aDNA studies —
including the Pompeii data, accession PRJEB74999 — go into the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) or the U.S. Sequence Read Archive (SRA), where they are publicly accessible to anyone [29]. Curated, uniformly reprocessed genotype calls live in the Allen Ancient DNA Resource (AADR),
maintained at Harvard Medical School by Mallick, Micco, Mah, Ringbauer,
Lazaridis, Olalde, Patterson, and Reich [26]. The AADR's most recent
public release at the time of this writing — version 9.0 / v62.0, dated
16 September 2024 — contains 13,571 ancient individuals plus 4,054
present-day reference samples drawn from the 1000 Genomes Project, the
Simons Genome Diversity Project, and the Human Genome Diversity Project,
all genotyped at the same core 1.23-million-SNP positions and aligned
to the hg19 reference genome [27]. The dataset crossed 10,000 ancient
individuals at the end of 2022 and is updated roughly twice a year; an
ArcGIS-based AADR Visualizer went online in 2025 [28].
Without this infrastructure, comparing Cast 52 to Hellenistic Egyptians,
Iron Age Italians, and Imperial Roman individuals from Latium would not
be a one-day analysis — it would be a multi-year project.
What this means for the Pompeii result. The 14 cast
samples Pilli et al. drilled were processed through this entire pipeline
twice — once at Florence's Molecular Anthropology Unit and once at
Harvard Medical School — using independent library preparations and
independent capture protocols. The mitochondrial haplogroups recovered
from each laboratory matched. The X-chromosomal contamination estimates
were below 4%. The damage patterns were as expected for ~2,000-year-old
DNA. The five usable genomes were then projected onto the AADR's
reference space and modeled with qpAdm against deeply curated source
populations. None of this proves the result correct in any philosophical
sense, but it does mean that for a popular narrative — "the mother in
the Golden Bracelet" — to survive contact with this evidence, every one
of these independent checks would have to fail in the same direction.
They didn't.
What the data do not say
It is worth being clear about the limits of the genetic evidence,
because public summaries (including the YouTube transcript that prompted
this article) tend to overshoot. The study analyzed five individuals —
not the population of Pompeii. The ancestry signal is robust and aligns
with parallel work on Imperial Rome, but the headline figure sometimes
given as "70% eastern Mediterranean ancestry" is a description of these
specific genomes, not an estimate of the city's population structure.
Cast 50 yielded only mitochondrial data, so a paternal-line relationship
to the other Golden Bracelet individuals cannot be formally excluded.
Phenotypic predictions for skin, eye, and hair color were possible only
because the HIrisPlex-S panel is small and well-calibrated; predictions
of disease susceptibility from the same low-coverage data were not
reliable. And the absence of biological kinship does not preclude
social, household, or affective relationships among the dead. The genome
is silent on whether the man holding the child loved him.
What the study does establish, with the rigor characteristic of David
Reich's group and the Italian aDNA consortia, is that the popular
narratives attached to these casts since the 19th century cannot be
defended as factual claims. They were inferences from posture, ornament,
and Victorian sentiment. They are now testable — and several have
failed the test.
A note on dates and details. Some popular accounts
of this story (including the YouTube transcript that prompted this
article) state that the eruption began on August 25, 79 CE, that the
casts were initially called "the Lady of Vesuvius," and that the first
cast was made in 1863. The August date is the traditional one but is
increasingly displaced by an October date based on the 2018 charcoal
graffito and supporting evidence; Fiorelli's first cast is
conventionally dated to 1863, but his systematic excavation began in
1860 and the casting technique was refined over several years. "Lady of
Vesuvius" is not standard terminology in the peer-reviewed literature
for Fiorelli's earliest casts. Temperature figures of "500 °C at
Pompeii" should be read with care: the 500–600 °C estimates apply to
Herculaneum and Oplontis, not to Pompeii, where surge temperatures were
closer to 250–300 °C.
Mastrolorenzo, G., Petrone, P., Pappalardo, L., and Guarino, F. M. "Lethal Thermal Impact at Periphery of Pyroclastic Surges: Evidences at Pompeii." PLOS ONE 5(6): e11127 (June 2010). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011127. https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0011127
Giordano, G., Pensa, A., Vona, A., et al. "Unique formation of organic glass from a human brain in the Vesuvius eruption of 79 CE." Scientific Reports
15: 4567 (February 27, 2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-88894-5. See also
Petrone, P., et al., "Heat-Induced Brain Vitrification from the
Vesuvius Eruption in c.e. 79," NEJM 382: 383–384 (2020), DOI: 10.1056/NEJMc1909867. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-88894-5 · https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc1909867
Pilli et al. 2024 (full STAR Methods, supplementary
tables, and dataset descriptions). Same DOI as [1]. All quantitative
claims about cast individuals, mtDNA/Y haplogroups, sex determination,
qpAdm models, ROH, HIrisPlex-S phenotypes, and strontium/oxygen isotope
values are drawn from this source.
Scorrano, G., Viva, S., Pinotti, T., et al. "Bioarchaeological and palaeogenomic portrait of two Pompeians that died during the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD." Scientific Reports 12: 6468 (May 26, 2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-10899-1. The first published genome from a Pompeian victim (the Casa del Fabbro individual). https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-10899-1
Antonio, M. L., Gao, Z., Moots, H. M., et al. "Ancient Rome: A genetic crossroads of Europe and the Mediterranean." Science
366(6466): 708–714 (November 8, 2019). DOI: 10.1126/science.aay6826.
The reference work establishing eastern-Mediterranean-shifted ancestry
in Imperial Rome. https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aay6826
Parco Archeologico di Pompei. "Pompei fu rioccupata dopo la distruzione del 79 d.C." Press release and article in the E-Journal degli Scavi di Pompei, August 6, 2025. https://pompeiisites.org/
Foss, P. W.Pliny and the Eruption of Vesuvius.
Routledge, 2022. Reassessment of the manuscript tradition for Pliny the
Younger's letters and the eruption date. ISBN 978-1-032-00131-7.
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology / Cell Press.
"DNA evidence rewrites histories for people buried in volcanic eruption
in ancient Pompeii." Press release, EurekAlert!, November 7, 2024. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1063333
Bentley, D. R., Balasubramanian, S., Swerdlow, H. P., et al. "Accurate Whole Human Genome Sequencing using Reversible Terminator Chemistry." Nature
456: 53–59 (2008). DOI: 10.1038/nature07517. The foundational paper for
Illumina sequencing-by-synthesis. See also Illumina's technology
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Meyer, M., and Kircher, M. "Illumina sequencing library preparation for highly multiplexed target capture and sequencing." Cold Spring Harbor Protocols
2010(6): pdb.prot5448 (June 2010). DOI: 10.1101/pdb.prot5448. The
double-stranded library preparation protocol used in the Pompeii study
and adopted as a community standard for ancient DNA. http://cshprotocols.cshlp.org/content/2010/6/pdb.prot5448
Rohland, N., Harney, E., Mallick, S., Nordenfelt, S., and Reich, D. "Partial uracil–DNA–glycosylase treatment for screening of ancient DNA." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B
370(1660): 20130624 (January 19, 2015). DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2013.0624.
Establishes the partial-UDG protocol used to retain terminal damage
signal while removing internal uracils. https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rstb.2013.0624
Gansauge, M.-T., and Meyer, M. "Single-stranded DNA library preparation for the sequencing of ancient or damaged DNA." Nature Protocols
8: 737–748 (2013). DOI: 10.1038/nprot.2013.038. Updated in Gansauge,
M.-T., et al., "Single-stranded DNA library preparation from highly
degraded DNA using T4 DNA ligase," Nucleic Acids Research 45(10): e79 (2017). DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkx033. https://www.nature.com/articles/nprot.2013.038 · https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5449542/
Rohland, N., Mallick, S., Mah, M., Maier, R., Patterson, N., and Reich, D. "Three assays for in-solution enrichment of ancient human DNA at more than a million SNPs." Genome Research
32: 2068–2078 (2022). DOI: 10.1101/gr.276728.122. Benchmarks the Reich
Lab 1240K reagent against commercial Daicel Arbor Biosciences and Twist
Bioscience panels. See also the foundational 1240K probe design in
Mathieson, I., et al., Nature 528: 499–503 (2015), DOI: 10.1038/nature16152, and Haak, W., et al., Nature 522: 207–211 (2015), DOI: 10.1038/nature14317. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9808625/
Jónsson, H., Ginolhac, A., Schubert, M., Johnson, P. L. F., and Orlando, L. "mapDamage2.0: fast approximate Bayesian estimates of ancient DNA damage parameters." Bioinformatics
29(13): 1682–1684 (2013). DOI: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btt193. The
standard tool for quantifying terminal C-to-T deamination patterns that
authenticate ancient DNA. https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/29/13/1682/184965
Peltzer, A., Jäger, G., Herbig, A., Seitz, A., Kniep, C., Krause, J., and Nieselt, K. "EAGER: efficient ancient genome reconstruction." Genome Biology 17: 60 (2016). DOI: 10.1186/s13059-016-0918-z. The pipeline used by the Florence laboratory in the Pompeii study. https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-016-0918-z
Fellows Yates, J. A., Lamnidis, T. C., Borry, M., et al. "Reproducible, portable, and efficient ancient genome reconstruction with nf-core/eager." PeerJ
9: e10947 (March 2021). DOI: 10.7717/peerj.10947. The Nextflow
successor to EAGER, the current community-standard pipeline. Project
repository at github.com/nf-core/eager. https://peerj.com/articles/10947/
Mallick, S., Micco, A., Mah, M., Ringbauer, H., Lazaridis, I., Olalde, I., Patterson, N., and Reich, D. "The Allen Ancient DNA Resource (AADR): a curated compendium of ancient human genomes." Scientific Data 11: 182 (February 10, 2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41597-024-03031-7. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-024-03031-7
A Guide To CubeSat Mission And Bus Design | Hackaday
Aerospace Engineering · Document Review & Industry Analysis
Bus Design in the Era of the Million-Dollar Spacecraft
A 1,749-page open-source textbook from the University
of Hawai‘i tries to teach the world how to build a CubeSat. It mostly
succeeds — but the gaps it leaves behind reveal how much the discipline
has changed since the standard was written.
A review of A Guide to CubeSat Mission and Bus Design
(Frances Zhu, ed., 2023), with industry context drawn from
peer-reviewed literature, NASA technical reports, FCC filings, and
small-satellite conference proceedings through April 2026.
Bottom Line Up Front
Frances Zhu's A Guide to CubeSat Mission and Bus Design is
the most comprehensive open-source spacecraft engineering textbook
available — funded by NASA's Artemis Student Challenge, anchored to an
actual flight-ready 1U kit, and rich with mathematics in the attitude
determination and control (ADCS) and electrical power (EPS) chapters.
But three structural gaps undercut it: no dedicated propulsion chapter in a book whose own contributing author is a propulsion specialist; no dedicated mission operations chapter,
despite the textbook's claim that one of its co-authors literally wrote
the operations chapter of the SMAD reference text; and a radiation-hardening discussion that is dangerously thin
for the COTS-heavy ethos the book promotes. The CubeSat industry,
meanwhile, has galloped past the 2,700-launched mark and is on track for
a $1.7-billion-plus market by 2034, while four of ten CubeSats on the
Artemis I flight failed outright — including NASA's own NEA Scout. Bus
design is no longer a student exercise. It is a high-stakes engineering
discipline with a 25-to-48-percent infant-mortality rate, and the next
generation of textbooks needs to teach it that way.
I. The Document, in Brief
In late 2023, Dr. Frances "Frankie" Zhu, an
assistant research professor at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa and
Principal Investigator for the Artemis CubeSat Kit, released a Creative
Commons textbook titled A Guide to CubeSat Mission and Bus Design.
The 1,749-page volume — produced through Pressbooks 6.14.0 and rendered
to PDF via Prince 15.1 — is the curricular spine of NASA's Artemis
Student Challenge, an effort to put a flight-ready 1U CubeSat kit into
the hands of universities, community colleges, and even middle schools
for under $5,000.
The book is enormous, ambitious, and openly idealistic. Its preface
declares an intention to "get rid of the silly notion that you need to
be a 'rocket scientist' to work [on] stuff that goes to space." It is,
in that sense, a direct intellectual descendant of Wertz, Larson, and
Everett's Space Mission Engineering — The New SMAD (Microcosm Press, 2011), but explicitly retargeted at the CubeSat-class missions that SMAD's last revision did not cover.
Authorship is collective. Zhu wrote most of the content. Avionics
engineer Amber Imai-Hong of the Hawai‘i Space Flight Laboratory (HSFL)
reviewed the electrical power and command-and-data-handling chapters.
Dr. Trevor Sorensen — author of the Mission Operations chapter in The New SMAD,
AIAA Fellow, and former Clementine Lunar Mission Manager — wrote the
space-environment, orbital-mechanics, and propulsion sections. The book
is licensed CC BY 4.0 and remains free.
What the textbook covers
The structure follows a recognizable spacecraft-engineering arc:
Ch.
Title
Approx. depth
1
Introduction (When/Who/Why/What/How)
Light, contextual
2
Systems Engineering, Requirements, Risk
Substantial
3
Design Drivers, Space Environment, Orbital Mechanics
Heavy
4
Structures & Mechanisms
Substantial; FEA-light
5
Electrical Power System (EPS)
Heavy
6
Communications & RF (Link Budget)
Heavy
7
Thermal Control
Substantial
8
Attitude Determination, Control & Sensing (ADCS)
Very heavy — the book's strongest chapter
9
Command & Data Handling / Avionics / Software
Heavy; conflated with ops
11
Verification, Validation, & Test
Moderate
12
Engineering Ethics (5 cases)
Brief
Note the absent number. There is no Chapter 10. Propulsion does not
have its own chapter at all — only scattered sub-sections inside ADCS
(under "Internal Torques → Thrusters") and isolated paragraphs
elsewhere. Mission Operations, similarly, is folded into the CDH chapter
rather than treated as its own discipline. For a book whose front
matter explicitly credits Dr. Sorensen with "the propulsion sections"
and whose academic counterpart (SMAD) devotes a full chapter to ops,
these are conspicuous omissions.
II. The Bus, Decomposed
To understand what the textbook does well — and where it falls
short — it helps to step back and define the discipline it teaches.
A spacecraft bus is everything that is not the payload. In
the canonical decomposition that Zhu adopts from SMAD and the NASA
Systems Engineering Handbook, a CubeSat bus comprises seven subsystems
plus the payload itself:
Structures & Mechanisms. The aluminum
skeleton (typically 6061-T6, hard-anodized) that holds everything
together, survives a 14.1-grms vibration environment on launch, and
complies with the rail tolerances in Cal Poly's CubeSat Design Specification Rev. 14.1. Includes deployables: antennas, solar panels, booms.
Electrical Power System (EPS). Solar cells,
batteries, power conditioning. For a 1U in low Earth orbit, this is
roughly 1–2 W average generation against a duty cycle of roughly
half-eclipse.
Command & Data Handling (C&DH). The
flight computer, the bus that connects subsystems (typically I²C, SPI,
CAN, or SpaceWire), and the watchdog timers that keep a single-event
upset from becoming a mission-killer.
Communications/RF. Typically UHF or S-band for telemetry and command, with X-band increasingly common for high-rate payload downlink.
Attitude Determination, Control & Sensing (ADCS).
The hardest discipline on the bus. Sun sensors, magnetometers, IMUs,
and star trackers feed quaternion-based filters (TRIAD, q-method,
Kalman); reaction wheels, magnetorquers, and increasingly
micro-thrusters apply control torques.
Thermal Control. Passive in nearly every CubeSat — multi-layer insulation, paint coatings, thermal straps — with active heaters as exceptions.
Propulsion. Optional in most missions, but
increasingly a make-or-break subsystem for any CubeSat that needs to
maneuver, hold formation, deorbit, or reach beyond LEO.
"The capacity or information that can be obtained by
the CubeSats is limited because they lack power generation, a reliable
position determination and control system, and a propulsion system for
on-orbit mobility." — Spherical Insights industry analysis, 2024
That single sentence captures the engineering problem the textbook
is trying to solve. Bus design, properly understood, is the art of
compromising among power, mass, volume, thermal load, attitude
stability, and reliability against the tyrannical constraint of the
10×10×10 cm CubeSat unit. Zhu's textbook teaches this compromise
reasonably well in five of seven subsystems. It teaches it weakly in
two.
III. Where the Textbook Excels
The ADCS chapter is genuinely outstanding
Chapter 8 — written by Zhu, who was the Attitude Dynamics, Control,
and Sensing lead for what she describes as "the most agile declassified
small satellite at the time" during her undergraduate years at Cornell —
runs through Euler angles, rotation matrices, Euler axis/axis-angle,
and quaternions, then derives quaternion kinematics and Euler's
rigid-body equations. It moves through TRIAD, Wahba's problem (with both
SVD and q-method solutions), and the discrete-time Kalman filter for
attitude estimation. It then catalogs sensors (sun, horizon, star
trackers, magnetometers, MEMS gyros, IMUs, GPS) and actuators
(magnetorquers, reaction wheels, control moment gyros, thrusters), and
ends with pointing budgets and mode logic.
This is graduate-level material delivered with classroom clarity.
It is, frankly, the best free treatment of CubeSat ADCS in the public
domain.
The EPS and CDH chapters are pragmatic and kit-anchored
Chapter 5 (EPS), reviewed by Imai-Hong, walks through power
generation (solar cell efficiency, MPPT), consumable storage (primary
cells), rechargeable storage (lithium-ion chemistry, depth-of-discharge
cycling), power management and distribution, and — critically — power
budgeting and profiling against orbital duty cycles. Chapter 9 (CDH)
treats flight software architecture, real-time operating systems
(VxWorks, RTEMS, FreeRTOS), watchdog timers, and the COSMOS
Comprehensive Open-architecture Solution for Mission Operations Systems
framework that HSFL itself developed. The discussion of watchdog
circuits — "an 'I'm okay' method of SEU detection" that resets the
microcontroller via a load switch when a Single-Event Functional
Interrupt occurs — is directly drawn from Vanderbilt's COTS-radiation
work and is the kind of system-level mitigation that sober CubeSat
builders actually use.
The book is honest about Class D risk
Zhu writes plainly that the Artemis Kit's components are not
space-rated, that the kit operates in NASA's Class D mission category —
"low priority, high risk, minimally complex … significant alternative or
re-flight opportunities" — and that a CubeSat program exists at the
extreme end of that risk envelope. This honesty is rare in educational
materials and important. It tells the student that what they are
building is not a Mars rover.
IV. Where the Textbook Falls Short
GAP #1 — STRUCTURAL OMISSION
No dedicated propulsion chapter
Sorensen, per his own bio in the book, "wrote the space
environment, orbital mechanics, and propulsion sections." The first two
appear as full subsections of Chapter 3. The third does not. There is no
Chapter 10. Propulsion appears only as scattered fragments — a few
paragraphs about thrusters as ADCS internal torques, brief mentions of
orbit control inside Chapter 9, and a passing reference to a GMAT
solution using "a low thrust propulsion system."
This omission is no longer defensible in 2026. Of the four
CubeSats on Artemis I that were intended to perform propulsive maneuvers
— TACHELES, ATENEA, K-RadCube, and SHAMS — only one (SHAMS) successfully fired its thrusters to raise perigee.
The other three burned up in the atmosphere. And on the same flight,
NEA Scout, NASA's own 6U solar-sail mission, was lost — never deployed
its sail, never reached its asteroid target. The propulsion subsystem is
now squarely on the critical path for any CubeSat that does more than
tumble in a parking orbit, and a textbook that omits it omits the most
failure-prone discipline in the bus.
The rapid pace of micro-propulsion development makes the omission
even more pressing. MIT's Space Propulsion Laboratory (Lozano, Krejci,
Velásquez-García) has now published peer-reviewed designs for additively
manufactured iodine-fed and ionic-liquid electrospray thrusters that
fit eight modules of four emitters each into a sub-1U envelope,
producing 75 µN at specific impulses of 800–1,600 s and over 350 m/s of
delta-V from a 1 kg CubeSat. A 2025 Advanced Science paper from
the same group demonstrated 3D-printed, throttleable electrospray
emitters with near-100% extractor transmission. None of this appears in
Zhu's textbook.
GAP #2 — STRUCTURAL OMISSION
No dedicated mission operations chapter
Mission operations — the discipline of planning passes,
scheduling commands, monitoring telemetry, and managing flight dynamics —
is folded entirely into the CDH/avionics chapter. This is a categorical
confusion. CDH is hardware-and-firmware. Operations is a
human-and-process discipline that has its own NASA handbooks, its own
software stack (in this case HSFL's own COSMOS framework), and its own
failure modes.
BioSentinel, the 6U deep-space CubeSat that Artemis I deployed in
November 2022, is a case in point. Its biology payload failed within
weeks, but the bus is still alive. As of mid-2025, the spacecraft was
approximately 70 million kilometers from Earth, communicating via the
NASA Deep Space Network roughly once per week. Its LET radiation
spectrometer continued returning data through solar maximum. The reason
the bus survived is not because the hardware was special — most of it
was COTS — but because the operations team rehearsed orbit
determination, coordinated trajectory work with the DSN and ESA, and
built a contact schedule that absorbed deployment-state uncertainty from
the SLS Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage. That entire body of
practice is essentially missing from Zhu's text.
GAP #3 — TECHNICAL DEPTH
The radiation-hardening discussion is too thin
The textbook acknowledges Single-Event Effects (SEEs) —
Single-Event Upsets, Latchups, and Functional Interrupts — and discusses
watchdog timers and current-limiting load switches at the system level.
But it does not treat Total Ionizing Dose (TID) budgeting, displacement
damage, the Careful COTS upscreening methodology, or the
radiation-hardness assurance (RHA) standards (MIL-STD-883 TM1019, JEDEC
JESD57, ECSS-Q-ST-60-15C) that govern qualification.
This matters because the book's pedagogy explicitly endorses
non-space-rated COTS components, and yet it does not teach the
parts-screening and lot-control practices that distinguish a 30-krad
mission that flies from a sub-1-krad part that fails on day one.
Vanderbilt's Goal Structuring Notation work for CubeSat radiation
reliability — formally adopted by NASA SMA — is a far better starting
point for the student who wants to fly a real Class D mission. The 2024
release of ECSS-Q-ST-60-15C and ongoing Canadian Space Agency RADHARD
work on Canadarm3 represent active developments the textbook cannot
capture because of its 2023 cut date, but the omission of even the
foundational concept of a radiation design margin (RDM) is harder to
forgive.
GAP #4 — FACTUAL/CITATION HYGIENE
Sourcing leans heavily on Wikipedia and informal references
Many of the textbook's technical claims are cited inline as
"[Wikipedia]," "[NASA]" without document number, "[SMAD]," or simply
"[Newcomb]" / "[Whitwam]" — the latter two appear to be popular-press
articles cited without dates, URLs, or DOIs. For a free educational
resource targeted at students, this sets a poor example of citation
hygiene. Mature aerospace engineering texts cite primary sources: NASA
Technical Reports Server documents (NTRS), AIAA conference papers, ECSS
standards, and peer-reviewed journals. Zhu's appendix does point
students toward the NASA Systems Engineering Handbook, NASA Cost
Estimating Handbook, and Doody's Basics of Spaceflight, but the inline citations throughout the body do not consistently follow.
GAP #5 — REGULATORY CURRENCY
FCC orbital-debris rules are not addressed
Any CubeSat operator authorized by the United States is now bound by the FCC's five-year post-mission disposal rule,
codified in 47 CFR Part 25 and effective for any satellite launched
after 29 September 2024. The rule replaced the long-standing 25-year
guideline and applies to all Commission-licensed and -market-access NGSO
systems. The FCC has gone further: the 28 October 2025 Space Modernization for the 21st Century
NPRM proposes to replace Part 25 entirely with a new Part 100,
introducing a "Variable Trajectory Spacecraft System" license category
for lunar, ISAM, and orbital-transfer missions.
Cal Poly's CubeSat Design Specification Rev. 14.1
(February 2022) is referenced in the textbook, which is appropriate. But
the FCC framework that determines whether any of the kits Zhu's program
ships will ever legally talk to the ground is not. NASA's Debris
Assessment Software (DAS, version 3.2.5 as of February 2024) is the tool
every applicant must run, and it is unmentioned.
GAP #6 — MINOR ERRORS
Small factual slips and outdated context
The book claims SMAD's last revision was in 2011. Space Mission Engineering: The New SMAD,
edited by Wertz, Everett, and Puschell, was published by Microcosm
Press in 2011 — that is correct — but the textbook does not acknowledge
that SMAD has been the subject of considerable critical commentary in
the small-satellite community for being insufficiently CubeSat-aware.
This is, in fact, Zhu's stated motivation for writing her book, but the
comparison would be sharper with concrete page references.
The explanation of Sputnik "blinking lights" to confirm
survival is poetic but technically wrong. Sputnik 1 (1957) carried a
20.005 / 40.002 MHz radio beacon emitting 0.3-second pulses; it had no
optical signaling. Subsequent Soviet satellites used optical reflection
from highly polished surfaces for ground tracking, not as a survival
indicator.
The CubeSat Design Specification is cited as "Rev. 14" in the
chapter outline but should be Rev. 14.1, the version actually published
by Cal Poly in February 2022.
Several H5P interactive elements and embedded YouTube videos
are referenced in-line as "[An interactive H5P element has been excluded
from this version of the text]" — appropriate for a PDF export, but the
text never tells the reader what they are missing or how to access the
live Pressbooks edition. A simple URL or QR code at each excised block
would solve this.
V. The Industry Context: Why Bus Design Has Gotten Harder
Zhu's textbook describes a CubeSat ecosystem that is, in 2026,
three to five years behind the curve. The discipline is no longer the
educational toy of the early 2000s.
The numbers are now industrial-scale
According to Erik Kulu's authoritative Nanosats Database
at IAC 2024, the cumulative CubeSat-and-nanosatellite count surpassed
4,200 entries with more than 2,714 actually launched. A record 390
nanosatellites flew in 2023 alone — 359 of them CubeSats — with Planet
Labs leading at 72, SpaceX/Swarm at 24, and Spire at 22. Roughly 75% of
nanosats now ride on Falcon 9. The 2,000th launched CubeSat flew in
early 2023; the first thousand had taken nearly 16 years, the second
thousand fewer than four.
Market-research consensus places the 2025 CubeSat market at
$480–540 million, with multiple analysts (IMARC, Market Research Future,
SkyQuest, Fortune Business Insights) projecting compound annual growth
rates of 11–16% through 2033–2034 and totals approaching $1.7–2.2
billion by mid-decade. North America holds roughly three-quarters of the
market by revenue. The 3U form factor is now the industry workhorse,
with 6U and 12U buses growing fastest for commercial Earth observation
and deep-space missions.
The reliability problem has not gone away
The most rigorous statistical work — Langer and Bouwmeester's
analyses through 2017, updated by Kulu through 2024 — shows
infant-mortality (dead-on-arrival or sub-30-day failure) rates of 25–48
percent for university-class CubeSats. After 30 days, the EPS becomes
the dominant failure mode (40+%); after 90 days, the communications
subsystem accounts for nearly 30% of failures. About one-third of failed
missions never received a single radio signal after launch.
Subsystem-level redundancy and improved testing — particularly
hardware-in-the-loop simulation and disciplined system-level integration
testing — have been shown to reduce these failures, but no university
CubeSat textbook (Zhu's included) yet treats reliability engineering as a
first-class discipline alongside ADCS or EPS.
Of ten secondary-payload CubeSats on Artemis I, four
failed outright. NEA Scout, OMOTENASHI, Team Miles, and LunIR either
never made contact or returned only weak signals.
Deep space changes everything
The Artemis I CubeSat manifest of November 2022 was both a triumph
and a wake-up call. Of the ten 6U secondaries deployed from the SLS
Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage, four were declared mission failures
within weeks. JAXA's OMOTENASHI lunar lander could not establish stable
communications. NASA's NEA Scout never deployed its 86-square-meter
solar sail. Lockheed Martin's LunIR returned only a weak signal. Team
Miles never made contact at all. The survivors — BioSentinel chief among
them, alongside ArgoMoon, BioSentinel, EQUULEUS, and the LunaH-Map
mission that eventually lost its propulsion system — taught the
community that deep-space CubeSat operations require fundamentally
different bus design choices than LEO.
BioSentinel's after-action papers, presented at the 2023 Small
Satellite Conference and at the 2024 IEEE Aerospace Conference, identify
three key bus-design lessons: (1) the JPL Iris transponder, designed
specifically for the Deep Space Network, was the single most critical
enabler; (2) autonomous attitude control with on-board momentum
management was indispensable because round-trip light time made
human-in-the-loop pointing impractical; and (3) micro-propulsion was
needed not for trajectory changes but simply for desaturation of
reaction wheels in the absence of a usable Earth magnetic field. The
ICPS deployment dropped BioSentinel within "a few hundred kilometers" of
lunar impact — a cautionary tale about the dispersion of CubeSat
deployment from a spinning upper stage.
CAPSTONE, Advanced Space's 25 kg, microwave-oven-sized CubeSat that
reached the Near Rectilinear Halo Orbit around the Moon in November
2022, told a similar story. After early in-orbit anomalies that nearly
cost the mission, software patches uploaded via DSN restored attitude
control and enabled cross-link experiments with the Lunar Reconnaissance
Orbiter and an early demonstration of the Cislunar Autonomous
Positioning System (CAPS). CAPSTONE has since served as the operational
pathfinder for the planned Gateway lunar space station.
Artemis II, now scheduled for early February 2026, will fly four
more CubeSats: TACHELES (Germany — electronic component lunar exposure),
ATENEA (Argentina — radiation shielding and GPS at lunar distance),
K-RadCube (Korea — tissue-simulant radiation effects), and SHAMS (Saudi
Arabia — high-altitude space weather). Of these, only SHAMS successfully
fired propulsion to raise perigee on the Artemis I rehearsal.
Propulsion technology is the new frontier
The most active area of CubeSat bus innovation in 2024–2026 is
propulsion. Cold-gas systems (Imken, Stevenson, & Lightsey, 2015; UT
Austin's Cold Gas System aboard NEA Scout) remain the conservative
choice, but electric propulsion has matured rapidly. MIT's Ion
Electrospray Propulsion System (iEPS) — using room-temperature ionic
liquid propellants and arrays of 480 emitter tips per square centimeter —
has flown on multiple constellation-management demonstrations. The
Velásquez-García group's 2025 demonstration of additively manufactured
electrospray thrusters represents a major step toward the routine
production of micro-thrusters tailored to specific mission delta-V
budgets. Iodine Hall thrusters from Busek and ThrustMe (the latter flown
on multiple commercial missions) bring 200–500 N·s/kg total impulse to
the 12U-and-up class.
Radiation-tolerant computing has shifted to RISC-V
The other frontier is the flight computer. The traditional CubeSat
C&DH solution — a Cortex-M0 or M4 microcontroller wrapped in
watchdogs and ECC memory — is being augmented by space-grade FPGAs
(Xilinx Zynq UltraScale+, Microchip ProASIC3) and, increasingly, by
RISC-V-based fault-tolerant SoCs. The Trikarenos chip from ETH Zürich
and the University of Bologna, fabricated in TSMC 28 nm, demonstrates a
configurable triple-core lockstep RISC-V microcontroller delivering
21.5× better efficiency than prior space-grade ASICs while running
fault-tolerant matrix multiplication at 250 MHz on 15.7 mW. Vorago
Technologies' rad-hard Cortex-M0 microcontrollers have become the de
facto reference design for supervisor boards on multi-DPU CubeSat
avionics. Zhu's textbook predates all of this.
VI. What a Second Edition Should Add
If Zhu and the HSFL team produce a 2026–2027 revision — and they should — the highest-leverage additions would be:
A standalone propulsion chapter covering
cold-gas, monopropellant (the now-ubiquitous green AF-M315E / ASCENT
propellant), iodine Hall, electrospray, pulsed plasma, and
resistojet/electrothermal options, with delta-V/Isp/power trade trees
and the FCC's deorbit-compliance implications baked in.
A standalone mission operations chapter,
drawing on Sorensen's SMAD operations work, with treatment of pass
planning, anomaly response, the Mission Operations Cost Estimation Tool
(MOCET), and case studies from BioSentinel and CAPSTONE.
A radiation-hardness assurance chapter covering
TID budgeting, displacement damage, SEE rates and cross-sections, the
Careful COTS methodology, and modern standards (MIL-STD-883 TM1019,
JEDEC JESD57, ECSS-Q-ST-60-15C).
A regulatory chapter covering FCC Part 25 /
Part 100, the September 2024 five-year deorbit rule, NASA DAS workflow,
ITU coordination, and ITAR/EAR licensing for international student
teams.
A reliability engineering chapter using
Langer's Weibull analyses and the empirical subsystem-failure-mode data
to teach students how to do failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA)
appropriate to Class D missions.
An expanded deep-space subsystem chapter
covering Iris-class transponders, DSN coordination, autonomy
requirements, momentum-management strategies in the absence of magnetic
torque, and trajectory-uncertainty budgeting.
Tightened citations: NTRS document numbers,
AIAA paper numbers, DOIs for journal citations, and removal of bare
Wikipedia references in favor of primary sources.
VII. The Verdict
For a free, NASA-funded, Creative-Commons-licensed open-source textbook, A Guide to CubeSat Mission and Bus Design
sets a remarkable bar. Its ADCS chapter alone is worth the download.
Its EPS, communications, and CDH treatments are pragmatic and grounded
in actual flight hardware. Its honesty about Class D risk and its
explicit pairing with a sub-$5,000 buildable kit make it pedagogically
powerful in ways the SMAD reference cannot be.
But CubeSat bus design has crossed a threshold. The 2,700-launch
milestone, the four-of-ten Artemis I CubeSat failure rate, the FCC's
five-year deorbit mandate, the rapid proliferation of micro-propulsion
options, and the migration of flight computing toward RISC-V
fault-tolerant SoCs together constitute an inflection point. A textbook
that omits propulsion as a chapter, that conflates operations with
avionics, and that treats radiation hardening as a paragraph cannot be
the definitive reference for the field as it now stands.
Zhu's textbook is, however, the right starting point. Paired with
the Cal Poly CDS Rev. 14.1, the NASA Systems Engineering Handbook, the
FCC orbital-debris rules, the SmallSat Conference proceedings, and the
Nanosats Database, it gives a determined undergraduate or self-taught
engineer most of what they need to design a CubeSat bus that has a
reasonable chance of surviving its first 30 days on orbit.
That chance, the data say, is somewhere between 52 and 75 percent.
It is going to take a better textbook — and a more rigorously sourced
one — to push that number higher.
Reviewer's Note
The Artemis CubeSat Kit and the textbook reviewed here remain freely available at pressbooks-dev.oer.hawaii.edu/epet302 and through the Hawai‘i Space Flight Laboratory at hsfl.hawaii.edu.
Mahina Aerospace distributes the physical kit. Despite the gaps
identified above, this reviewer recommends the textbook to any student
or club beginning serious CubeSat bus development — with the caveat that
it should be supplemented by the additional sources cited below.
Verified Sources & Citations
Primary Document Under Review
Zhu, F. (ed.) (2023). A Guide to CubeSat Mission and Bus Design (cloned version, August 2023). University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Hawai‘i Space Flight Laboratory. Pressbooks. CC BY 4.0. https://pressbooks-dev.oer.hawaii.edu/epet302/
Sloan, A., Ngo, K., Amendola, C., Clements, L., Takushi, E.,
Imai-Hong, A., & Zhu, F. (2022). "University of Hawaii's
Spaceflight-Ready, Low-Cost, Open-Source, Educational Artemis CubeSat
Kit." 36th Annual Small Satellite Conference, SSC22-WKV-04. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/smallsat/2022/all2022/76/
Wertz, J. R., Everett, D. F., & Puschell, J. J. (eds.) (2011). Space Mission Engineering: The New SMAD. Microcosm Press, Hawthorne, CA. ISBN 978-1881883159.
Villela, T., Costa, C. A., Brandão, A. M., Bueno, F. T., &
Leonardi, R. (2019). "Towards the Thousandth CubeSat: A Statistical
Overview." International Journal of Aerospace Engineering, 2019:5063145. https://www.hindawi.com/journals/ijae/2019/5063145/
Cho, M. et al. (2019). "CubeSat Mission: From Design to Operation." Applied Sciences, 9(15):3110. (University-led CubeSat early failure rate ≈ 48%.) https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/15/3110
Hanson, M. et al. (2023). "BioSentinel: Mission Summary and Lessons Learned From the First Deep Space Biology CubeSat Mission." 37th Annual Small Satellite Conference, SSC23-WKII-02. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/smallsat/2023/all2023/67/
Wikipedia contributors (2026, April). "Artemis II." Wikipedia. (Includes manifest of TACHELES, ATENEA, K-RadCube, and SHAMS CubeSats.) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemis_II
Propulsion
Kim, H., & Velásquez-García, L. F. (2025). "High-Impulse,
Modular, 3D-Printed CubeSat Electrospray Thrusters Throttleable via
Pressure and Voltage Control." Advanced Science, 12, 2413706. DOI: 10.1002/advs.202413706. https://advanced.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/advs.202413706
Imken, T. K., Stevenson, T. H., & Lightsey, E. G. (2015).
"Design and Testing of a Cold Gas Thruster for an Interplanetary CubeSat
Mission." Journal of Small Satellites, 4(2):371–386.
Radiation Effects and COTS Components
Austin, R. A., Sierawski, B. D., & Witulski, A. F. (2017).
"A CubeSat-Payload Radiation-Reliability Assurance Case Using Goal
Structuring Notation." 2017 IEEE Aerospace Conference. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7889672
Rogenmoser, M., & Benini, L. (2023). "Trikarenos: A
Fault-Tolerant RISC-V-based Microcontroller for CubeSats in 28nm." ETH
Zürich / University of Bologna. arXiv:2310.02045. https://arxiv.org/pdf/2310.02045
"Hardening and Advancing COTS FPGA/GPU Integrated Circuits for the Realization of Space-Grade System-on-Module" (2025). 39th Annual AIAA/USU Conference on Small Satellites, SSC25-95. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/smallsat/2025/all2025/95/
Regulatory and Government
Federal Communications Commission (2022). "Mitigation of
Orbital Debris in the New Space Age, Second Report and Order." FCC
22-74. (Five-year post-mission disposal rule, effective 29 September
2024.) https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-22-74A1.pdf
Planning Your Rooftop Solar Replacement in 2034: What California Homeowners Need to Know Now
Your 2014-era panels are reaching end of life — and the rules for what comes next have changed beyond recognition. Here is what the policy landscape, the math, and the contracts actually look like in 2026, and how to plan a decade out.
By Stephen L. Pendergast | Consumer-style independent analysis | April 2026
Bottom Line Up Front
If you installed rooftop solar in California in 2014 under NEM 1.0, your 20-year grandfathered tariff expires in 2034 — the same year your panels reach the conventional end of their useful life. When that happens, three forces converge against you simultaneously:
you lose the retail-rate net metering that made your original purchase pay back,
any replacement system installs under the Net Billing Tariff (NEM 3.0), which pays roughly 75 percent less for exported solar, and
the federal 30 percent residential solar tax credit (Section 25D) expired December 31, 2025 and will not exist for cash purchases in 2034.
The practical implication: a 2034 replacement is no longer a "panel swap." It is a re-architecting of your home as a self-consumption energy system. To recapture the economics your 2014 system had, you will almost certainly need to add battery storage, accept a longer payback (currently 7–10 years for solar-plus-storage), and seriously evaluate third-party-ownership structures (leases or PPAs) — which, under current law, are the only path to a federal tax benefit for residential solar. None of these conclusions is final: an active California Court of Appeal case, possible legislative changes, and the trajectory of utility rates and battery prices over the next eight years could all shift the math. Plan, don't commit. The right move in 2026 is to monitor, not to act.
The Three Things That Changed While You Weren't Looking
For homeowners who went solar in California between roughly 2008 and 2016, the financial logic was elegant. Buy panels, claim a 30 percent federal tax credit, and use the utility grid as a free battery: feed surplus solar in at midday at near-retail rates, draw it back in the evening at the same rates, net out to roughly zero. That arrangement, called Net Energy Metering 1.0, paid for itself in five to seven years and kept paying for two decades.
That world is gone. Three independent decisions — by California regulators, the U.S. Congress, and physics — have collectively rewritten the rules a 2034 replacement system will operate under.
Change #1: California's Net Billing Tariff (NEM 3.0)
On December 15, 2022, the California Public Utilities Commission unanimously adopted Decision D.22-12-056, formally titled the Net Billing Tariff and informally called NEM 3.0. It took effect on April 15, 2023, for the customers of California's three investor-owned utilities — PG&E, SCE, and SDG&E. (Municipal utilities like LADWP and SMUD operate under their own separate rules.)
Under the prior tariff, exported solar was credited at the full retail rate of roughly $0.30–$0.35 per kWh. Under NEM 3.0, exports are credited at hourly Avoided Cost Calculator (ACC) values that average roughly $0.05–$0.08 per kWh — a reduction of about 75 to 80 percent. The CPUC's stated rationale was the so-called "duck curve": with so much midday solar already on the grid, the marginal value of additional midday exports has collapsed, and continuing to pay retail rates was, in the Commission's view, shifting costs onto non-solar ratepayers.
Critically, the per-kWh value of solar you consume yourself in your own home is unchanged — it is still worth whatever the retail rate is on your bill (currently around $0.46/kWh for SDG&E bundled service as of January 2026). What collapsed is the value of solar you cannot use yourself in real time. That single shift is what made battery storage move from optional to economically essential.
Change #2: The Federal Tax Credit Expired
On July 4, 2025, President Trump signed H.R. 1 — the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Public Law 119-21) — into law. The bill terminated the Section 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit, which had provided a 30 percent dollar-for-dollar federal tax credit for homeowner-owned solar and battery installations. Under the prior Inflation Reduction Act schedule, the credit was supposed to remain at 30 percent through 2032, then step down to 26 percent in 2033 and 22 percent in 2034 before expiring. The OBBBA accelerated that sunset by roughly seven years: no credit is available for any residential expenditure made after December 31, 2025, with no phase-down.
IRS guidance under IR-2025-86 confirms that an "expenditure" is treated as made when the original installation is complete — paying for a system before December 31, 2025 does not preserve the credit if installation finishes later. For a typical $30,000 installation, this represents the loss of about $9,000 in direct federal subsidy. A 2034 cash purchase of solar will receive zero federal tax credit under current law.
One narrow window remains: the commercial Section 48E Investment Tax Credit, which is what third-party owners (leasing companies and PPA providers) claim. That credit is preserved for residential systems owned by a third party, but is itself sunsetting on a tight timeline. To qualify, projects must either (a) begin construction by July 4, 2026, in which case they generally have four years to be placed in service, or (b) be placed in service by December 31, 2027. Both deadlines fall well before any 2034 replacement project.
Change #3: Solar Panels Have a Useful Life
Solar panels do not stop working at year 25; they slowly produce less power. Modern monocrystalline panels degrade at roughly 0.4 to 0.7 percent per year in real-world conditions, according to research by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory analyzing nearly 2,000 systems worldwide. Standard manufacturer performance warranties guarantee 90 percent of nameplate output through year 10 and 80 percent through years 25 to 30. A Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory survey of U.S. industry professionals found that average expected operational lifespan has actually risen — from about 20 years in 2007 to 25–35 years in 2025.
For a 2014 installation, by 2034 you will be at year 20. Your panels will likely still produce useful power — perhaps 85 to 90 percent of original — but two practical issues drive replacement decisions: (1) inverters, particularly central string inverters, typically need replacement at 10 to 15 years and may already have been replaced once; (2) most product warranties expire by year 25 to 30, meaning any failure becomes an out-of-pocket repair. Whether to replace at year 20 or run the system to failure is a financial judgment, not a forced timeline.
The Specific Trap Facing 2014 NEM 1.0 Customers in 2034
Here is the detail that most articles miss and that matters most for your situation. Existing NEM 1.0 customers were grandfathered into their original tariff for 20 years from the date of Permission to Operate (PTO). A system that received PTO in 2014 will be transitioned off NEM 1.0 in 2034, regardless of whether you replace the panels or do nothing.
SDG&E's own customer-portal language confirms this: their "Solar (SBP)" — Solar Billing Plan — designation explicitly applies to systems "interconnected after April 14, 2023, or are more than 20 years old." In other words, even if you simply leave your existing panels in place past 2034, you will be moved to the current successor tariff at that point. That successor tariff is, today, NEM 3.0. It may be NEM 4.0 or some renamed structure by 2034, but it will not be the retail-rate net metering you originally bought into.
This means 2034 is a hard inflection point even with no equipment change. Once you fall off NEM 1.0:
Exported energy will be valued at hourly avoided-cost rates (currently averaging $0.05–$0.08/kWh).
You will be subject to non-bypassable charges on imports.
You will be moved onto a time-of-use rate plan with a 4–9 PM peak window — exactly when your solar is no longer producing.
Without storage, your bill will rise materially, even if your panels are still functioning.
This reframes the 2034 question. You are not asking "should I replace my panels?" You are asking "given that I will lose retail-rate net metering in 2034 no matter what, what is the most efficient way to manage my home's energy economics from that point forward?"
The Math: What a 2034 Replacement Looks Like in 2026 Dollars
Solar pricing changes year to year, but as a baseline, EnergySage's April 2026 California data shows an average installed cost of $2.41 per watt before incentives, with typical 7–9 kW systems running $18,000 to $25,000. A residential battery (such as a single Tesla Powerwall or FranklinWH unit at roughly 13.5 kWh) adds another $11,000 to $15,000 installed.
Industry payback estimates currently cluster as follows for systems installed under NEM 3.0:
Configuration
Typical Payback (NEM 3.0)
Notes
Solar only
10–14 years
Severely degraded by export devaluation
Solar + battery (general market)
7–10 years
Captures peak TOU rates via self-consumption
Solar + battery, low-income equity tiers
3–5 years
SGIP equity rebates can cover most of battery cost
Two California programs partially offset the federal loss. The Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP), administered by the CPUC, provides per-kWh battery rebates that vary by customer category. General-market residential rebates typically run $150 to $200 per kWh of storage capacity (covering roughly 15 to 25 percent of installed battery cost). Equity-tier rebates can reach $850/kWh, and Equity Resiliency rebates for customers in high fire-threat districts or with documented PSPS exposure can reach $1,000/kWh. The newer Residential Solar and Storage Equity (RSSE) budget, launched in mid-2025 with $280 million in funding, offers $1,100/kWh for storage plus $3,100/kW for paired solar to qualifying low-income customers — though as of late 2025, those funds were already exhausted with new applicants going onto a waitlist. SGIP's general-market budgets at PG&E and SCE were closed to new applicants as of early 2026.
California also exempts the added value of residential solar from property tax assessment under existing state law, and provides a Net Surplus Compensation mechanism for customers whose annual production exceeds annual consumption.
The Pending Litigation You Should Watch
The legal status of NEM 3.0 is unsettled and has been actively litigated since 2023. The case is Center for Biological Diversity v. California Public Utilities Commission (Case No. A167721), filed by the Center for Biological Diversity, Environmental Working Group, and Protect Our Communities Foundation. The plaintiffs argue that the CPUC violated Public Utilities Code § 2827.1, which requires any successor net metering tariff to "ensure customer-sited renewable distributed generation continues to grow sustainably" and to consider all benefits of rooftop solar to ratepayers, the grid, and California's environmental goals.
The procedural history matters because it is not over:
August 7, 2025: The California Supreme Court ruled unanimously (7-0, Justice Leondra Kruger writing) that the First District Court of Appeal had used "an unduly deferential standard of review" and ordered the appellate court to reconsider the case using the Yamaha standard — independent judicial review of whether the CPUC stayed within its statutory authority.
November 21, 2025: Plaintiffs re-filed written arguments under the new standard.
March 10, 2026: The First District Court of Appeal, on remand, again upheld NEM 3.0, finding that the CPUC's tariff balanced costs and benefits adequately and that "sustainable growth" in the statute does not mean preserving prior installer profit margins.
April 2026: Plaintiffs filed a second petition for review with the California Supreme Court, arguing the appellate court "resurrected the same flawed review standard" the Supreme Court had rejected in August 2025.
Two parallel federal cases are also pending in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California: Boyd v. CPUC et al. (Case 5:25-cv-01286-PCP), an antitrust and "as-applied" PURPA claim, and Californians for Renewable Energy v. CPUC (Case 3:25-cv-10532-JSC), alleging the CPUC failed to comply with a prior Ninth Circuit ruling.
None of this guarantees relief. As the Solar Rights Alliance itself has acknowledged, "waiting for the lawsuit outcome is not a clear strategy." But the underlying tariff structure governing your 2034 replacement is genuinely unsettled, and that uncertainty is itself a planning input.
The Legislative Wild Card: AB 942
In 2025, California Assembly Bill 942 — introduced by Assemblymember Lisa Calderon, a former government affairs director at Edison International — initially proposed to (a) sunset all NEM 1.0 and 2.0 grandfathering after 10 years instead of 20, and (b) force any new buyer of a solar-equipped home onto NEM 3.0 immediately upon sale. The first provision was stripped during Assembly committee. The second, force-on-sale provision passed the full Assembly in May 2025 but was then removed by the Senate Energy, Utilities, and Communications Committee in July 2025 after opposition from a coalition of more than 100 environmental, consumer, and clean-energy organizations, the California Association of Realtors, and the California Building Industry Association.
For now, your NEM 1.0 grandfathered status is intact through 2034 and transfers with the home if you sell. But this should not be taken as final. Similar bills targeting legacy NEM customers will likely return in future sessions, and the practical advice is to assume your 20-year grandfather is honored while monitoring for legislation that could shorten it.
Five Strategies for an Eight-Year Planning Horizon
1. Keep what you have running as long as possible.
Your 2014 NEM 1.0 system is, in effect, a depreciating financial instrument that is more valuable to you than to any other owner. Every additional year of retail-rate net metering you collect is essentially uncovered ground in today's market. Have the inverter inspected; replace it if it fails (a like-for-like swap typically does not trigger a tariff change). Consider an O&M visit every two to three years to catch microcracks, soiling, or wiring issues. Run it to 2034.
2. Add battery storage now, separately from any panel decision.
This is one of the few moves that strictly improves your position. Under longstanding CPUC policy and confirmed by every utility, adding battery storage to an existing NEM 1.0 or 2.0 system does not affect grandfathered status. A battery installed in 2026 begins paying back immediately by reducing peak-hour grid imports (the 4–9 PM SDG&E peak block, where total rates can exceed $0.65/kWh in summer), provides backup during PSPS events, and is already in place when your tariff transitions in 2034. As of early 2026, Section 25D federal credits no longer apply to new batteries, but SGIP rebates remain available for qualifying residential customers.
3. If you must expand panel capacity before 2034, use a non-export design.
California Rule 21 allows existing NEM 1.0 and 2.0 customers to add up to 1 kW or 10 percent of original system size (whichever is greater) without losing grandfathered status. Beyond that threshold, you can preserve your tariff by using a non-exporting design — additional panels feed only into your home or battery and never push to the grid. This is a genuine engineering option, not a gimmick, and CALSSA-member installers can work within utility-approved configurations.
4. Model the third-party-ownership math seriously, but skeptically.
The article you cited from North County Daily Star by Cosmic Solar's Pey Shadzi accurately describes the central post-25D market reality: under leases, PPAs, and prepaid-PPA hybrids ("transitional ownership" or "deferred ownership" structures), a third party owns the system, claims the Section 48E commercial credit, and theoretically passes the value through. The article's claim that 48E credits can reach 50 percent is technically possible — the base 30 percent plus stackable bonuses for domestic content (10 percent) and energy community siting (10 percent) can in principle reach 50 percent — but the bonuses have qualifying conditions that not every residential installation meets, and post-2025 Foreign Entity of Concern (FEOC) restrictions add real compliance risk for TPO providers. Industry analysts at Wood Mackenzie expect TPO pricing to rise 10 to 12 percent in 2026 due to tax-equity and FEOC concerns, narrowing the historical gap between TPO and loan economics.
For a 2034 transaction, the larger problem is simpler: under current law, the Section 48E credit itself sunsets for residential leases on December 31, 2027. Unless Congress reinstates or extends it — which is possible but not currently in any pending legislation — TPO economics in 2034 will look very different than they do today, possibly with no federal incentive at all on either side of the contract. The Cosmic Solar article was written when 48E was a live option for new contracts; by 2034 it likely will not be.
5. Watch utility rates more than tax credits.
The single largest economic driver for any 2034 decision will not be policy — it will be retail electricity rates. SDG&E's bundled residential average reached approximately $0.457/kWh in January 2026, among the highest in the United States. A Base Services Charge was added in October 2025, restructuring how fixed costs appear on bills. SDG&E rates have roughly tripled since your original 2014 installation. If that trajectory continues — driven by wildfire-mitigation capital expenditures, transmission buildout, and renewable procurement obligations — the underlying economics of self-generated solar improve regardless of what happens to net metering or the tax code. The kWh you generate and consume yourself in 2034 will be worth whatever SDG&E charges that day, which is the part of the equation no policy change can erase.
What Consumer Reports-Style Skepticism Tells You
The California rooftop solar industry is in a difficult moment. Battery attachment rates jumped from about 11 percent before 2023 to roughly 50–70 percent by mid-2024, but overall installation volumes have fallen, more than 17,000 industry jobs were cut after NEM 3.0 took effect, and several large national installers have filed for bankruptcy. Some of the financing structures now being marketed — particularly "transitional ownership" and "prepaid PPA" products that promise the benefits of both ownership and tax-credit pass-through — are genuinely innovative, but they are also new, complex, and have not been stress-tested across a full economic cycle. The IRS has rules under 26 U.S.C. § 50 requiring third-party owners to hold the property for at least five years and ensuring buyout options approximate fair market value. Read the contract. Have a CPA review it. Understand what happens if the TPO provider goes bankrupt mid-term.
Be especially cautious of any installer who tells you (a) the federal tax credit is "coming back," (b) the lawsuits "will" overturn NEM 3.0, or (c) they have a unique financing structure that "guarantees" day-one savings. None of those claims is true with the certainty implied. The honest version is that solar still works, but the margins are thinner, the contracts are more complicated, and the policy environment is genuinely fluid.
A Practical 2026–2034 Timeline
Year
Action
Rationale
2026
Inverter inspection; consider battery add-on
Battery does not affect NEM 1.0; SGIP rebates still available
2027
Track 48E sunset; monitor Court of Appeal / Supreme Court
Last year of any meaningful federal residential incentive
2028–2030
Annual production audit; track battery prices and panel efficiency
Prices typically continue declining; efficiency improving
2031
Begin formal modeling of replacement scenarios
Three-year horizon allows for installer due diligence
2032
Solicit at least 3 detailed quotes; verify NEM tariff in effect
Successor tariff may have evolved beyond NEM 3.0
2033
Make final purchase/lease/PPA decision
Allow 6–12 months for permitting, install, interconnection
2034
System commissioned; tariff transition managed
Coordinated with NEM 1.0 grandfather expiration
The Honest Conclusion
Rooftop solar in California still produces real economic value for the right homeowner, but the value proposition has fundamentally changed character. It is no longer a passive investment that pays itself back through generous export credits. It is now a self-consumption strategy that requires storage, careful sizing, time-of-use awareness, and active management. The case for it now rests primarily on avoiding rising retail rates rather than on selling power back to the utility.
For your specific situation — a 2014 NEM 1.0 system in San Diego facing a forced tariff transition in 2034 — the planning horizon is long enough that several variables (battery prices, the litigation outcome, possible federal policy reversals, SDG&E rate trajectory) could shift the optimal answer materially. The single best action you can take in 2026 is also the cheapest: do nothing irreversible, add storage if it pencils out on its own, monitor the policy environment annually, and revisit the full replacement decision in 2031–2032 with eight years of additional information that is not available to anyone today.
Congressional Research Service. Expiration and Carryforward Rules for the Residential Clean Energy Credit, CRS Insight IN12611, September 25, 2025.https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/IN12611
U.S. Public Law 119-21. One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1), signed July 4, 2025. 139 Stat. 72.
26 U.S.C. § 25D — Residential Clean Energy Credit (as amended by P.L. 119-21).
California Supreme Court. Center for Biological Diversity et al. v. California Public Utilities Commission (Case No. A167721), unanimous opinion of Justice Leondra Kruger, August 7, 2025.
California 1st District Court of Appeal. Decision on remand in Center for Biological Diversity v. CPUC, March 2026.
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. U.S. solar industry professional survey on operational lifespans, referenced in DOE Solar Energy Technologies Office materials, 2025.
International Energy Agency. PV Power Systems Programme Snapshot 2025.
Shadzi, Pey. "California Rooftop Solar Has Changed — And So Must the Way We Think About It." North County Daily Star, 2026 (industry-perspective source provided by reader).
Note on caveats: This article is informational analysis, not legal, tax, or financial advice. Federal tax law, California utility tariffs, and active litigation may change between publication and any 2034 implementation decision. Consult a CPA familiar with renewable-energy tax provisions and a licensed California solar professional before committing to any contract. The author is not a lawyer or financial advisor.
Solar Replacement Mechanics: What Panasonic's Exit, the Change-Out Process, and 2026 Equipment Tell Us
A practical follow-up addressing what actually happens to your panels when they come down, what the installation day looks like, and whether the "much higher efficiency" claims about new panels and non-Tesla BESS hold up under scrutiny.
By Stephen L. Pendergast | Companion analysis to "Planning Your Rooftop Solar Replacement in 2034"
Bottom Line Up Front
Three things you should know that change the picture from the prior analysis:
(1) Panasonic exited residential solar manufacturing entirely in 2025 — formally notifying installation partners on April 28, 2025. Your panels are still under warranty, but Panasonic's North American support is winding down to a single email channel and the manufacturer's long-term ability to honor that 25-year warranty against deep workmanship defects in 2034 is a real risk worth pricing.
(2) California classifies PV modules as Universal Waste, which is a favorable regulatory regime — but recycling is still a separately-paid service, typically $15–$45 per panel ($300–$900 for a typical residential array), and your installer will not include this in the new-system quote unless you ask. Comstock Metals opened the first dedicated California prep-and-aggregation facility in early 2026, so logistics have improved.
(3) The "much higher efficiency" claim is real but smaller than marketing suggests — your 2014 Panasonic HIT panels likely delivered around 19–20% efficiency at install. Today's premium panels reach roughly 22–24% (mass-market TOPCon) or 24%+ (back-contact IBC). That is a meaningful gain in watts per square foot but not a doubling. The bigger 2026 advance is in batteries: LFP chemistry, longer warranties (15 years vs. Tesla's 10), and genuine modular alternatives — Enphase IQ Battery 5P/10C and FranklinWH aPower 2 — that out-spec the Powerwall on warranty and, in some cases, on continuous output.
Part I: The Panasonic Problem
This is the development that matters most for your specific situation, and it deserves its own treatment.
On April 28, 2025, Naoki Kamo, president of Panasonic Eco Systems North America, sent a letter to the company's installation partners announcing that Panasonic was discontinuing its solar and battery storage business worldwide. The letter, signed by Kamo and shared publicly through installer channels and pv magazine, described the move as "a strategic decision — not a reflection of the technology's performance." Panasonic continues to manufacture EV battery cells (its $4 billion Kansas plant came online in the first half of 2025) and remains active in heat pumps, but the residential PV and Evervolt battery lines are over.
The trajectory was longer than the 2025 announcement suggests. Panasonic stopped in-house solar cell manufacturing in 2021, when it shut its Malaysian factory and began sourcing OEM modules to sell under the Panasonic brand. Their share of EnergySage marketplace quotes fell from 35 percent in early 2020 to 6 percent by late 2024. The Evervolt battery share fell from 7 percent to 1 percent over the same period.
Panasonic has formally pledged to honor existing warranties, including for products not yet installed at the time of announcement. Support is being maintained via the company website and a dedicated email channel (panasonicsolar@us.panasonic.com). For now, the warranty is intact.
What This Means for Your 2014 Panels Specifically
Your 2014 Panasonic panels are almost certainly HIT (Heterojunction with Intrinsic Thin-layer) modules. HIT was Sanyo's pioneering heterojunction technology — Sanyo introduced commercial HIT modules in 1997, Panasonic acquired Sanyo in 2009 and rebranded the line. HIT panels have historically been among the best-performing panels in real-world conditions: low temperature coefficients (good for hot San Diego rooftops), strong low-light performance, and degradation rates well below the typical 0.5–0.7 percent annual that older panels exhibit.
This is the "good news" part. Your 2014 panels are likely producing closer to 88–92 percent of their original output as of 2026, not the 80 percent floor most warranties guarantee. They will probably deliver useful power well past 2034.
The "less good news" is that the 25-year product and performance warranties Panasonic issued on these panels run through approximately 2039. Panasonic intends to honor them. But warranty support from a manufacturer that has formally exited a product line tends to taper over time:
Replacement modules of the original specification become unavailable, and the warranty obligation shifts to "comparable" replacement — meaning you may receive a panel from a different manufacturer that doesn't visually or electrically match.
Mixing panels of different vintages on a string-inverter system can create electrical complications. (Your Semper Solaris microinverter or optimizer setup, depending on what was originally installed, may handle this better.)
Customer-service responsiveness erodes as the dedicated team is reassigned. The April 2025 letter explicitly directs customers to a single email channel.
If a workmanship defect manifests later in life — backsheet failure, junction-box delamination, encapsulant browning — the practical path to a successful warranty claim narrows.
One product-protection backstop exists: Solar Insure offers an SI-30 Manufacturer Default Protection product backed by an AM Best A+ rated insurance carrier. If a manufacturer goes out of business or, presumably, exits the market, Solar Insure sources replacements from their Approved Vendor List as "substantially similar" components. This is paid coverage that would be added to a future system, not retroactively applied to your existing panels, but it is useful to know it exists when you eventually replace.
Has Semper Solaris Survived?
For warranty handling and service, your installer matters as much as your manufacturer. As of April 2026, Semper Solaris is operational in San Diego at 964 Fifth Avenue, holds an A+ Better Business Bureau rating with accreditation since 2013, and remains a SunPower Elite dealer. They were ranked by Ohm Analytics as the fastest-growing installer in California among installers with 10,000+ kW installed in the prior 12 months. They appear to be a viable counterparty for warranty service through 2034 — which is genuinely useful, because they have your original system records and may be able to coordinate Panasonic warranty claims more effectively than you can directly.
That said, the residential solar industry is consolidating rapidly. Multiple national installers have filed bankruptcy since NEM 3.0 took effect, and even strong companies face margin pressure. It is worth confirming Semper's continued operation annually as part of your 2026–2034 monitoring routine.
Part II: California Recycling — How It Actually Works in 2026
California is one of the better states in the U.S. for end-of-life PV management, but the system requires the homeowner (or installer acting on the homeowner's behalf) to actively engage it.
The Regulatory Layer
California regulates discarded photovoltaic modules as Universal Waste — a designation under the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) that California, along with Hawaii, has explicitly applied to PV. The Universal Waste designation matters because it imposes less burdensome handling requirements than fully hazardous waste classification while still preventing landfilling. Panels can fail the Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure (TCLP) test for lead — your 2014 Panasonic HIT panels, like virtually all silicon panels of that era, contain lead solder — which is why the regulation exists in the first place. (Note: Panasonic was one of the manufacturers that voluntarily worked toward lead-free solder, though whether your specific 2014 modules used it depends on the model and production date.)
The EPA proposed in October 2023 to formalize PV modules as Universal Waste at the federal level. As of early 2026, California's existing classification continues to govern.
What Recycling Actually Costs and Where It Goes
Industry estimates as of 2026 put residential panel recycling at approximately $15 to $45 per panel, including transportation, disassembly, and processing. For a typical 20-panel residential array, total recycling cost is roughly $300 to $900. As volume scales (the U.S. is projected to hit one million tons of PV waste annually by 2035), unit costs are expected to drop.
The recycling pathway has three options:
Reuse / refurbishment first. Panels with 80%+ remaining output and intact glass/backsheet can be tested, certified, and resold into secondary markets — off-grid applications, small commercial deployments, or international resale. Your 2014 Panasonic HIT modules at year 20 (in 2034) will likely qualify for this path. If they pass IV-curve testing, they have meaningful residual value rather than zero. Specialized firms like EnergyBin operate marketplaces for this.
Materials recycling. Modules go through mechanical separation (dismantling, crushing, sorting), recovering glass (~76% of module mass), aluminum frames (~10%), silicon (~5%), and copper wiring. Some processes use thermal or chemical treatment for higher-purity recovery of silver and silicon. Industry recovery rates of 80%+ of module mass are now achievable.
Disposal. Last resort. Universal Waste regulations make this legally complicated and financially comparable to recycling, so for residential volumes, recycling generally wins.
Where Your Panels Would Go
Until early 2026, California panels mostly traveled to Arizona facilities for processing. In January 2026, Comstock Metals opened a satellite storage and prep facility in California's Central Valley — the first dedicated facility in the largest U.S. solar market. Panels are aggregated, prepared for transport, and shipped to Comstock's fully permitted recycling operation in Nevada under their certified zero-landfill protocol. Comstock describes itself as the only certified, North American, zero-landfill solution for PV recycling. Other operators serving California include We Recycle Solar, Cleanlites, and SiTech.
How to Actually Make Recycling Happen
This is the practical part most articles skip. When you contract for replacement in 2032 or 2033, recycling is a separately-quoted line item. Your contract should specifically address:
Who removes and palletizes the old panels (the new installer's crew, not a roofer).
Who transports them to a recycler — and to which recycler.
Whether you receive a Certificate of Recycling and chain-of-custody documentation.
Whether the panels are first evaluated for resale (which can offset cost) or sent directly to materials recovery.
Cost: $15–$45 per panel is the current range; get this in writing.
The most common failure mode is that the installer "handles disposal" with no specifics, the panels go to a transfer station, and you end up unknowingly contributing to landfill volume. Universal Waste regulations technically forbid this for businesses, but enforcement at the residential scale is light. Specifying a named recycler and asking for documentation is the protection.
Part III: What the Change-Out Day Actually Looks Like
The industry term you'll hear is "detach and reset" for a roof-only project, or "decommissioning and repowering" for a full equipment swap. For your 2034 case — old panels off, new panels and new battery on, new inverter, new interconnection — it's a full repowering, not a detach-and-reset.
The Pre-Work Phase (Weeks Before)
System design and engineering: 1–2 weeks. New string diagrams, structural calculation if going from one panel size/weight to another, electrical load calculations for the new battery integration, permit drawings. Permits: 4–8 weeks in San Diego depending on the jurisdiction. The City of San Diego has its own permitting; unincorporated county areas use County BCA. Utility interconnection application: parallel to permitting, typically another 4–6 weeks for SDG&E. Plan on 8–12 weeks total from contract signing to install start.
This timeline matters for your 2034 planning: if your NEM 1.0 grandfather expires in summer 2034, you don't want the system being commissioned in fall 2034 with a multi-month gap of unfavorable tariff treatment. Start the contract process in late 2033.
Installation Day Itself
For a typical residential 7–9 kW replacement on existing racking with new panels, new microinverters or string inverter, and a new battery:
Day
Work performed
Day 1
System de-energized at the main service panel and PV disconnect. Old panels removed and palletized (typically 20 per pallet) for transport to recycler. Old microinverters/optimizers removed. Old wiring assessed. If the original racking is reusable (often it is), it stays; flashings are typically replaced because lag-bolt seals are not reliable on reuse.
Day 2
New racking attachments and flashings installed where needed. New panels mounted. New module-level electronics (microinverters or optimizers) attached.
Day 3
DC and AC wiring runs. New inverter installation if a string or hybrid inverter (your existing inverter, already replaced once under warranty, will likely be at end-of-life by 2034 anyway). New monitoring system commissioning.
Day 4
Battery installation. This includes the battery enclosure mounting (typically wall-mounted in garage or exterior wall), the gateway/system controller (Tesla Gateway 3, Enphase IQ System Controller 3, or FranklinWH aGate, depending on brand), and the automatic transfer switch wiring. Service panel modifications if needed for whole-home backup.
Day 5
Inspection by city/county building department. Utility witness of interconnection. System energization. Commissioning tests, final monitoring setup.
Real-world timelines slip. Rain in San Diego is rare but does happen. Plan on a working week of crew presence and a few weeks of waiting for utility witness scheduling.
Critical Decisions That Get Made on Site
Existing wiring and conduit: Generally reusable but inspect for UV damage, rodent damage, and code compliance. 2014 wiring may not meet 2034 NEC requirements (rapid shutdown, arc-fault detection). If non-compliant, a full re-wire is required and adds significant labor cost.
Service panel: Older 100A or 125A panels often need upgrade to 200A to support battery integration plus possible future EV charging or heat pump. This is a $2,000–$4,000 line item that surprises homeowners.
Roof condition: Year-20 composition shingle roofs are typically at end-of-life. If you're replacing the panels, replacing the roof underneath them simultaneously is far cheaper than doing it separately — you avoid a second detach-and-reset cycle. Tile roofs (common in San Diego) generally last longer but flashings and underlayment can fail.
Storage of old panels: The crew needs ground space. The Tesla support documentation explicitly notes that the homeowner is responsible for providing a safe location to store removed panels. Expect a portion of your driveway or yard to be occupied with palletized modules for a day before pickup.
Cost Range
For the residential repowering itself (not counting the new battery), industry estimates put the labor portion at $1,500 to $6,000 above the cost of the new equipment. New equipment (panels + inverter + balance of system) at California's April 2026 average of $2.41/W puts a 7 kW system at roughly $17,000 before the battery. Adding a battery (single Powerwall 3 / aPower 2 / equivalent stack) typically runs $14,000 to $17,000 installed. Recycling adds $300–$900. Service panel upgrade if needed adds $2,000–$4,000. Total range for a full repowering with battery: roughly $33,000 to $45,000 in 2026 dollars, before any state incentives, with no federal tax credit available for an owned system after December 31, 2025.
Part IV: The "Higher Efficiency" Question — Reality Check
You've read that new panels and non-Tesla BESS are "much higher efficiency." Here is what that actually means, calibrated against what you have today.
Solar Panel Efficiency: Real Numbers
Your 2014 Panasonic HIT panels — depending on the specific model — were rated at approximately 19–20 percent module efficiency at install. The HIT N240 from that era was 19.0%; the HIT N245 was 19.4%; the higher-end HIT N335 (a later 96-cell variant) reached about 20.3%. These were premium panels for their time.
Here is what's available in 2026:
Technology
Module efficiency (typical)
Examples
Gain vs. 2014 HIT
Modern PERC (legacy)
20–21.5%
Phasing out
+1 to +2 pts
N-type TOPCon (mass-market premium)
22–24%
JinkoSolar Tiger Neo, Trina Vertex N, JA Solar JAM, Canadian Solar TopHiKu
+3 to +5 pts
HJT (heterojunction — same tech family as your HIT)
22.5–24%
REC Alpha Pure-RX, Risen Hyper-ion, Panasonic EverVolt successor lines
+3 to +4 pts
IBC / Back-contact (premium)
23–24.1%
SunPower Maxeon 7, LONGi Hi-MO X10 (HPBC)
+4 to +5 pts
Perovskite-silicon tandem (lab/early commercial)
26–30%+
Not yet reliable for residential 2026 buying
+6 to +10 pts (theoretical)
Translated to your roof: a panel rated at 23.5% in the same physical footprint as your 2014 HIT N240 (about 1.6 m² active area) produces roughly 18% more power per square foot. On a 7 kW system, that's the difference between needing 28 panels and needing 24 panels — meaningful, but not transformational.
The bigger gain isn't peak efficiency — it's degradation rate. Your 2014 HIT panels were warranted at 0.5%/year degradation. Modern HJT and TOPCon panels are warranted at 0.25–0.4%/year. Over a 25-year lifetime, that compounds to roughly 7–8 percent more total energy delivered. SunPower/Maxeon's IBC panels carry a 40-year warranty guaranteeing 88.25% output at year 40 — the longest in the industry, though SunPower itself underwent significant corporate restructuring in 2026, so the warranty backing requires due diligence.
One specific caveat for your situation: SunPower/Maxeon's 2026 corporate restructuring affects the import status of certain Maxeon panels. Solar.com noted in early 2026 that Maxeon panels "are not currently able to be imported into the U.S." in some channels. This is a moving target — verify availability when you actually quote in 2032–2033.
Temperature Performance Matters in San Diego
San Diego summers are mild compared to Phoenix or Las Vegas, but rooftop panels still see 60–70°C operating temperatures. Temperature coefficient — how much output drops per degree above 25°C — separates premium from budget panels. HJT panels run roughly -0.24%/°C. TOPCon runs -0.29 to -0.32%/°C. Older PERC panels and your 2014 HIT panels were closer to -0.30 to -0.35%/°C. Over 25 years on a hot roof, the better temperature coefficient adds another 2–5 percent of cumulative production. HJT keeps the edge here, which is relevant since that's the technology family you're already familiar with from Panasonic.
Part V: The Battery Storage Landscape Beyond Tesla
The Tesla Powerwall has dominated residential storage marketing, but in 2026 the field has genuine alternatives. Here's how the three serious non-Tesla options stack up against the Powerwall 3 (which itself is an LFP-chemistry, integrated-inverter design):
Feature
Tesla Powerwall 3
Enphase IQ Battery 5P / 10C
FranklinWH aPower 2
Capacity per unit
13.5 kWh
5 kWh / 10 kWh (modular)
15 kWh
Continuous output
11.5 kW
3.84 kW / 7.08 kW per unit
10–11.5 kW
Architecture
DC-coupled, integrated inverter
AC-coupled, embedded microinverters
AC-coupled, requires aGate controller
Chemistry
LFP (LiFePO4)
LFP
LFP
Warranty
10 years, unlimited cycles, 70% at year 10
15 years, 6,000 cycles, 60% at year 15
15 years or 60 MWh throughput
Installed cost (2026)
~$15,300–$16,200 (single unit); ~$5,950/unit at scale
$6,000–$8,000 per 5P unit; ~$13,000 per 10C
$14,000–$17,000 (single)
Best for
New installs, integrated solar+storage, multi-unit scaling
Whole-home backup with generator integration, big appliance loads
Notable weakness
10-year warranty is shortest; integrated inverter can't be serviced separately from battery
Premium price (~30–50% more per kWh than Tesla); needs IQ System Controller
Requires aGate controller; AC-coupled means efficiency loss vs. DC-coupled solar charging
For your specific situation as a homeowner with existing solar production data through Semper Solaris's online monitoring, a few things stand out:
If your existing inverter is Enphase microinverter-based (which Semper Solaris frequently installs and which Panasonic's AllGuard warranty explicitly covers when paired with Enphase), the Enphase IQ Battery is the path of least architectural disruption. The microinverter ecosystem on your roof talks to the IQ Battery natively. The 15-year warranty is the longest in the residential market.
If you want maximum continuous power for big motor loads — air conditioning compressor starting, well pumps, EV charging — the FranklinWH aPower 2 has the highest single-unit start capability (185 LRA, 15 kW peak) and integrates cleanly with backup generators if you ever add one. It's also the only one designed around 200A whole-home backup without requiring a sub-panel.
If you want the most battery for the dollar, the Powerwall 3 plus expansion units remains the cost leader at scale because each $5,950 expansion unit adds 13.5 kWh without duplicating the inverter. The 10-year warranty is the trade-off.
What the Cosmic Solar Article Got Right and What It Missed
The article you originally cited featured Tesla as the example BESS — that's reasonable as a market reference point but misleading as a recommendation by 2026. The article also didn't mention LFP chemistry at all, which is now the universal standard across all four major brands and represents a genuine safety and longevity upgrade over the older NMC chemistry that dominated through about 2022. NMC had higher energy density but was more thermally unstable; LFP has slightly lower density but is dramatically safer (lower thermal-runaway risk, better cycle life). Every major 2026 residential battery is LFP. This is a real engineering improvement, not marketing.
One more technical point the article missed: round-trip efficiency. AC-coupled batteries (Enphase, FranklinWH) lose roughly 10–13% in DC-AC-DC conversion when charging from solar. DC-coupled batteries (Powerwall 3) achieve 97.5% on the spec sheet, ~89–90% in practice. For a battery that cycles daily for 15+ years, this efficiency difference compounds. It's a meaningful argument for the Powerwall 3's integrated design when paired with a new solar install, less meaningful when retrofitting onto existing solar.
Part VI: Updated Action Items
Adding to the previous timeline:
2026: Register your existing Panasonic warranty and confirm Semper Solaris has your install records. Save Panasonic's customer-support email (panasonicsolar@us.panasonic.com) and any existing warranty certificates as paper copies. The product warranty is contractual; the practical ability to claim it requires documentation that survives manufacturer-side staff turnover.
2026–2027: If considering a battery add-on now (which preserves your NEM 1.0 grandfather), the decision is now genuinely between Tesla Powerwall 3, Enphase IQ Battery (best fit if your Semper Solaris install used Enphase microinverters), and FranklinWH aPower 2 — not Tesla by default.
2030–2031: Begin checking your panel performance trends through your existing Semper Solaris online monitoring portal. If degradation is tracking faster than the warranted 0.5%/year curve, document it and consider a warranty claim while Panasonic's support infrastructure is still functional.
2032: Solicit replacement quotes. Specifically ask each bidder: (a) named PV recycler and Certificate of Recycling, (b) panel technology (HJT, TOPCon, or IBC) and degradation warranty, (c) battery brand and round-trip efficiency, (d) service panel adequacy assessment.
2033: Sign contract. Allow 8–12 weeks pre-install for permitting and interconnection.
2034: Coordinate the new system commissioning to occur at or near your NEM 1.0 expiration date so you're not simultaneously degraded panels and on the punitive successor tariff.
The Honest Conclusion (Updated)
Two things have shifted in this analysis from the original article. First, Panasonic's 2025 exit means that the "premium American brand" reasoning that guided your 2014 purchase no longer protects you the way it did then — your panels are still good hardware, but your warranty is on a slowly closing manufacturer support channel. Second, the technology landscape is genuinely better in 2026 than in 2014: panels are 15–25 percent more efficient, last meaningfully longer, and degrade more slowly. Batteries are LFP-chemistry-standard with 15-year warranties available. Recycling pathways exist that didn't exist when you bought.
None of that changes the fundamental policy and economic conclusion: NEM 3.0 (or its successor), the loss of the federal residential tax credit, and the inevitability of your tariff transition in 2034 are the dominant variables. The equipment improvements help on the margin. They are not the reason to act, and they are not a reason to delay either — they are a reason to plan carefully and verify everything in writing when the time comes.
Letter from Naoki Kamo, President, Panasonic Eco Systems North America, to installation partners, dated April 28, 2025. Published in pv magazine and via Panasonic North America website.
As before: this is informational analysis and is not legal, tax, or financial advice. Manufacturer warranties and product availability change frequently; verify directly before any 2034 commitment. The author is not a lawyer, financial advisor, or licensed solar contractor.
Budget Worksheet: Preparing for 2034 Solar Replacement
An eight-year savings and spending plan to support a NEM 1.0 → successor-tariff transition with minimal financial disruption. Numbers in 2026 dollars unless noted; inflation adjustments shown separately.
By Stephen L. Pendergast | Companion budget to the 2034 planning analyses
Bottom Line Up Front
A reasonable target is to have approximately $45,000 to $55,000 in 2034 dollars available for the replacement project, which translates to roughly $38,000 to $46,000 in 2026 dollars at 2.5% annual inflation. This funds: a complete panel replacement with high-efficiency modules, new inverter, full-home battery storage, recycling of the existing panels, service panel upgrade if needed, and a contingency reserve of about 15%. If you choose to add battery storage in 2026 to preserve NEM 1.0 economics during the remaining grandfather period, that pulls roughly $14,000–$17,000 forward but doesn't change the 2034 total much because the 2034 battery cost is removed from that year's budget.
The dominant variables are (a) whether your service panel needs upgrading (±$3,000), (b) what the federal tax landscape looks like in 2034 (currently no residential credit available; $9,000+ swing if Congress reinstates), and (c) how quickly battery and panel prices continue to decline (historically 5–8% per year). Plan for the conservative case; treat any upside as bonus.
The Two Strategic Paths
Before the numbers, the budget depends on which path you choose. They have different cash-flow profiles but similar lifetime totals.
Path
Description
2026–2033 spend
2034 spend
Total nominal
Path A: Defer Everything
Run existing system to 2034. No battery add-on. Replace everything at once.
~$2,500 (monitoring + minor maintenance)
$38,000–$46,000 (2026 $)
$46,000–$56,000 (2034 $)
~$48,500–$58,500 (2034 $)
Path B: Battery Now, Panels Later
Add battery in 2026–2027 (preserves NEM 1.0). Replace panels and inverter in 2034.
Path B's total is slightly lower in nominal dollars, primarily because adding battery storage now starts capturing peak-hour TOU savings (4–9 PM SDG&E rates exceed $0.65/kWh in summer) immediately rather than waiting until 2034. Those eight years of additional bill reduction — call it $1,500–$2,500/year of incremental savings versus your current solar-only NEM 1.0 setup — substantially offset the upfront battery cost. Path A is simpler and avoids interim equipment-vintage-mixing risk.
The budget below presents Path A as the base case. Path B variants are noted where they differ.
Part I: 2026–2033 Pre-Replacement Costs
These are the costs to keep your existing system functional and to prepare for the transition.
Year
Item
Cost (2026 $)
Notes
2026
Annual O&M inspection (optional)
$200
Visual check, soiling assessment, monitoring data review
2026
Warranty documentation backup
$0
Register Panasonic warranty, save records, no cash cost
2027
Annual O&M inspection
$200
Microcrack inspection, thermal imaging if available
2028
Comprehensive system audit
$500
IV-curve testing, more thorough than annual visual
2028
Inverter health check
$150
Already replaced once under warranty; check for second failure signs
2029
Annual O&M inspection
$200
2030
Panel cleaning (professional)
$300
Optional; useful before performance audit
2030
Performance trend analysis
$0
Use Semper Solaris monitoring data, no separate cost
2031
Replacement quote solicitation
$0
Free from installers; budget time, not money
2031
Annual O&M inspection
$200
2032
Independent engineering review
$500
Hire outside expert to review competing 2034 quotes
2033
Permit and engineering deposit
$500
Down payment to selected installer to start permit process
Pre-replacement subtotal (Path A)
$2,750
~$340/year average
Path B Add-On (Optional Battery in 2026–2027)
Year
Item
Cost (2026 $)
Notes
2026 or 2027
Battery system (one of three options below)
$14,000–$17,000
Single Powerwall 3, FranklinWH aPower 2, or 2× Enphase IQ 10C
2026 or 2027
SGIP general-market rebate (if available)
($1,500)–($3,000)
$150–$200/kWh × ~13.5 kWh; budget closures vary
2026 or 2027
Service panel upgrade if 100A or 125A existing
$0–$4,000
200A required for many whole-home battery configurations
2026 or 2027
Permits and electrical inspection
$500
Included in some installer quotes; verify
Path B incremental cost (net)
$11,000–$18,500
Wide range driven by panel upgrade need
Key assumption on SGIP: As of early 2026, the general-market residential SGIP budgets at PG&E and SCE are closed to new applicants. SDG&E territory funding status varies. The Residential Solar and Storage Equity (RSSE) budget is exhausted with a waitlist. Only equity and equity-resiliency tiers reliably have budget — and you would not qualify under typical income or fire-zone criteria. Plan for $0 SGIP rebate as the base case; treat any rebate as bonus.
Part II: 2034 Replacement Project — Itemized
This is the main budget event. Each line is sized for a typical San Diego residential system roughly equivalent to your current array (assumed 5–7 kW, 20–24 panels). All costs in 2026 dollars unless marked.
Equipment
Item
Low
Mid
High
Notes
New panels (premium HJT or IBC, 6 kW system)
$10,800
$14,460
$18,000
$1.80–$3.00/W panel cost; mid is EnergySage 2026 CA average ($2.41/W)
Microinverters or string/hybrid inverter
$2,400
$3,600
$4,800
Microinverters add cost but improve monitoring and resilience; hybrid inverter integrates battery
The realistic target — what you actually budget toward — is the mid-case in 2034 dollars: roughly $70,000. The high case captures bad scenarios (full electrical re-wire, premium IBC panels, no resale value, full contingency consumed). The low case assumes things go right and equipment prices continue to soften.
Part III: Adjustments for Path B (Battery Now)
If you add a battery in 2026–2027, the 2034 project drops by roughly the cost of a battery (you keep the existing 2026/2027 unit). However, the existing battery will be 7–8 years into its 10–15 year warranty by 2034, so you need to decide whether to keep it or replace it.
Less: 2026–2034 incremental TOU bill savings (~$2,000/yr × 8 yr)
($16,000)
Path B net effective cost
~$50,800
Path B mid-case nets to roughly $50,800 versus Path A mid-case at $70,200 in 2034 dollars — about a $19,000 swing in Path B's favor over the planning horizon, driven entirely by capturing eight extra years of peak-hour bill savings. The risk in Path B is battery warranty exposure: if the 2026 battery fails between 2034 and 2042, you're paying out-of-pocket for replacement on a unit you no longer have warranty coverage on.
Part IV: Eight-Year Savings Plan
Treating the $70,200 mid-case 2034 target as the goal, here are three savings tracks at different rates of return.
Approach
Monthly contribution
Years to target
Notes
High-yield savings (4% APY)
$625/mo
8 years
FDIC-insured, lowest risk; achievable target
Conservative bond ladder (5% YTM)
$590/mo
8 years
Treasury or high-grade muni ladder; modest interest-rate risk
Balanced 60/40 portfolio (7% expected)
$540/mo
8 years
Equity exposure means 2034 value uncertain; not appropriate for fixed deadline
For a fixed eight-year horizon with a non-deferrable deadline, the high-yield savings or bond ladder approach is appropriate. Equity exposure introduces sequence-of-returns risk that doesn't pay for itself on this short a timeline.
If you choose Path B and add a battery in 2026, the savings target drops to roughly $51,000 in 2034 dollars, which translates to about $450/month at 4% APY for the remaining seven years (after spending $15,500 in year one).
An alternative framing: Many homeowners with substantial home equity finance the 2034 project rather than save for it. A HELOC or home-equity loan at typical mid-2020s rates (currently 7.5–8.5% APR for prime borrowers) on a $70,000 project amortized over 10 years runs about $830/month in payments — meaningfully higher than the $625 savings approach but with the advantage that the system pays for itself partly through bill reduction. This is a personal preference question that depends on your tolerance for debt in retirement and the opportunity cost of liquidity.
Part V: Sensitivity Analysis — Things That Could Move the Number ±$10,000
Variable
Direction of swing
Approximate $ impact
Federal residential tax credit reinstated by 2034
Down
−$9,000 to −$15,000
Federal credit stays gone (current law)
Baseline
$0
NEM 3.0 lawsuit succeeds, exports re-credited at higher rate
Down
−$5,000 to −$10,000 lifetime value
SDG&E rates continue +6%/year through 2034
Down (improves payback)
Increases project NPV by ~$8,000
Battery costs decline 6%/year through 2034
Down
−$5,000 to −$8,000 on battery
Service panel upgrade required (100A existing)
Up
+$3,000 to +$4,000
Roof replacement needed (concurrent with panel swap)
Tariff structure punitive enough to require larger battery
Up
+$13,000 (second battery unit)
Part VI: One Often-Missed Item — The Roof
This deserves separate attention because it can dwarf the other line items. Composition shingle roofs in San Diego typically last 20–25 years; concrete or clay tile roofs commonly last 40–50 years. If your 2014 panel installation was on a roof that was already a few years old, your roof and your 2034 panel replacement could coincide.
The economics of doing both simultaneously are compelling: detaching panels for a roof replacement costs $1,500–$6,000 by itself, and that cost is fully consumed if you do the roof and panels in separate years. Doing them together avoids the redundant detach-and-reset. Owens Corning Platinum Preferred warranties (which Semper Solaris offers) reach 50 years on premium roof systems.
Roof scenario
Approximate added 2034 cost
Roof in good condition, no work needed
$0
Spot repairs, partial reflashing
$2,000–$5,000
Full asphalt shingle replacement, 2,000 sq ft
$15,000–$25,000
Full tile or premium roof replacement
$25,000–$45,000
Have a roofing inspection done in 2030 or 2031. If the roof has 5–10 years of remaining life at that point, you have time to plan; if it has fewer than 5 years, fold it into the 2034 budget and consider whether to do the work earlier. Doing a roof replacement before 2034 (under your existing solar system, which would be temporarily removed) is more expensive than coordinating the two together.
Part VII: Recommended Budget Posture
Item
Recommendation
Target 2034 fund balance
$70,000 (mid-case in 2034 dollars)
Monthly contribution rate
$625/month into a high-yield savings account or short-duration Treasury fund
Path A vs. Path B
Path B (battery now) is financially superior under most scenarios but introduces battery-warranty risk. Path A is simpler.
Roof inspection
2030 or 2031 — earlier than you'd otherwise think
Reserve for unknowns
The 15% contingency in the budget above; don't reduce it
Inflation adjustment
Re-evaluate target every two years; if SDG&E rates are climbing >5%/year, increase target accordingly
Federal credit posture
Assume zero. If reinstated by 2034, treat it as a windfall.
Annual maintenance budget
$300–$500/year for inspections, cleaning, and monitoring
Part VIII: One-Page Summary
Phase
Years
Expected outlay
Pre-replacement maintenance
2026–2033
~$2,750
Optional battery add-on (Path B only)
2026 or 2027
$14,000–$17,000
2034 replacement project — Path A
2034
$46,800–$93,300 (2034 $)
2034 replacement project — Path B
2034
$33,800–$71,500 (2034 $)
Total nominal outlay over 8 years
$50,000 to $96,000 depending on path and scenario
Recommended savings target
by mid-2033
$70,000
Recommended monthly contribution
2026–2033
$625/month at 4% APY
What's Not in This Budget
Lost solar production during the install transition. The 5–10 days of system downtime during change-out costs roughly $50–$150 in foregone bill savings. Trivial.
EV charger or heat pump add-ons. These are separate decisions but can affect service panel sizing. If you're considering either, account for them in the 2034 design.
Property tax impact. California exempts the added value from residential solar from property tax assessment, so the panel replacement itself doesn't increase your property tax. Battery storage similarly exempt under current rules.
Insurance changes. Adding battery storage typically increases homeowner insurance premiums by $50–$150/year. Verify with your carrier.
Lifetime energy savings. The new system will save money on electricity bills over its 25-year life — typically $40,000–$100,000 in California per EnergySage. That's the return on this budget, not part of the budget itself.
All figures are planning estimates in 2026 dollars unless marked. Actual quotes in 2032–2033 will reflect then-current pricing, then-current incentives, and then-current code requirements. This worksheet is intended as a savings planning tool, not a substitute for installer quotes or a CPA's tax planning. Consult a financial advisor for personalized retirement-income planning around major capital outlays.
Panasonic exits solar and battery storage, ending decades-long journey
The
company announced to installation partners that it will no longer
produce products for the residential solar and storage market, but will
continue to offer warranty and installation support for existing and
ongoing projects.
Panasonic will
discontinue its solar and battery storage business, the company told its
North American installation partners in a letter dated April 28. The
letter, signed by Naoki Kamo, president of Panasonic Eco Systems North
America, was shared in full by an installer on Reddit and partially published on the company’s website. According to the letter:
This was a strategic decision—not a reflection of
the technology’s performance or the commitment of our partners like you.
While we continue to believe in the potential of solar and energy
storage, it is no longer the right business fit for us at this time.
Panasonic pledged to honor all warranties, including those for
systems not fully installed, and committed to supporting customers with
clear guidance on third-party warranty coverage. Support will continue
via the company’s website and a dedicated email channel.
While exiting the residential solar and storage market,
Panasonic continues to invest in battery cell manufacturing for electric
vehicles. Its $4 billion battery facility in Kansas, announced in 2022,
is scheduled for completion in the first half of 2025. The company also
remains active in other clean energy technologies, including heat pumps.
This announcement marks the end of Panasonic’s role in the
solar industry, a position it cemented after acquiring Sanyo in 2009.
Sanyo, a pioneer in heterojunction solar cell technology, was fully
integrated into Panasonic by 2011. Its HIT (heterojunction with
intrinsic thin-layer) modules—launched in 1997—were the world’s first
commercially available heterojunction (HJT) solar panels. According to
the company, the “solar cells used are a hybrid with a unique structure
comprised of a thin mono-crystalline silicon wafer surrounded by
ultra-thin amorphous silicon layers,” a design praised for its strong
performance in high temperatures and real-world conditions.
Following the rebranding of Sanyo’s HIT modules under the
Panasonic name, the company remained a prominent player in residential
solar, eventually expanding its product line to include Evervolt battery
systems and all-black HJT modules with conversion efficiencies of more
than 22%.
Despite its strong technology, Panasonic gradually shifted from
in-house manufacturing to OEM partnerships as cost competition,
particularly from Chinese suppliers, squeezed margins and reshaped the
global solar market.
In 2021, the company officially exited the solar panel manufacturing business. One final release
under the Panasonic brand followed, even after it had sold its solar
module IP. To this day, Panasonic’s legacy modules remain among the top sellers in the U.S. residential market.
Although its HIT technology once led in efficiency, it was
eventually overtaken by mono PERC and TOPCon cell designs. However, HJT
has seen renewed interest in recent years and is often viewed as the most promising silicon-based platform for pairing with perovskite tandem cells.
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Includes
a labor warranty (25 years if installed by an Authorized, Premium, or
Elite Installer and registered within 60 days of Warranty Start Date)
Covers replacements and/or repairs at no cost to you
Is
an all-encompassing warranty (i.e. includes every main component of
your system, including Enphase inverters and Unirac or IronRidge racking
system)
Quick overview: Panasonic’s history and warranty
Panasonic
is one of the oldest and largest consumer electronics manufacturers in
the world. Founded in 1918, Panasonic began their journey as a lightbulb
socket manufacturer. Today, Panasonic is committed to enabling its
customers through innovations in sustainable energy, immersive
entertainment, integrated supply chains, and smart mobility solutions,
with over 250,000 employees worldwide. With over 40 years of experience
in the solar industry, Panasonic has become one of the most popular
brands. In fact, in 2021, Panasonic was the most quoted solar panel
brand on the EnergySage Marketplace.
Panasonic
offers one of the best solar panel warranties in the industry. Their
TripleGuard Warranty includes a 25-year product, power, and labor
warranty for their standalone panels. When you bundle your Panasonic
panels with Enphase microinverters,
Panasonic offers an even more extensive warranty: the AllGuard
Warranty. This warranty offers all of the benefits of the TripleGuard
Warranty, while also extending to the microinverters, racking, and
monitoring system.
Panasonic's
solar panel warranty at a glance CATEGORY PANASONIC'S COVERAGE INDUSTRY
STANDARD Product 25 years 10 years Power90.76% for HIT, 92% for EverVolt
at year 2580% at year 25 Labor costsYes No Workmanship Yes No Shipping of
partsYes No Extended warranty offering No No
NOTE: if you’re interested in Panasonic solar panels, they’re currently offering a $250 rebate for their EverVolt solar panels on EnergySage.
Panasonic’s product warranty
Also
known as a material warranty, a solar panel manufacturer’s product
warranty covers the integrity of the equipment itself – if your solar
panels have a defect, mechanical issue, or experience unreasonable wear and tear, that should be covered by your product warranty.
If
there’s a defect with your solar panel, it’s typically apparent
“out-of-the-box”. In other words, you or your installer should be able
to tell that something is amiss and fix the problem immediately–often
before the panel even makes it to your roof. Regardless, it’s good to
consider products with longer warranties for the peace of mind it
provides.
Panasonic includes a 25-year product warranty for all of their solar panels.
Panasonic’s power warranty
Like
every other type of electronic, the performance of your solar panels
will degrade over time: fortunately, solar panel manufacturers offer a
power (or performance) warranty for their products. Power warranties
help protect you against atypical degradation of your solar panels,
ensuring that the output of your panels won’t fall below a certain level
after a set period of time.
Different
types of solar panel technologies degrade at different rates. Generally
speaking, the highest quality solar panels offer long power warranties
(25 years or more) that guarantee at least 80 percent of the original
output by the end of the warranty term.
Panasonic
provides a 25-year power warranty. Their HIT series power warranties
guarantee that their panels will still produce at least 90.76% of their
original output by the end of the warranty term:
97% output at the end of year 1
No more than 0.26% degradation from years 2-25
Power output of 90.76% by year 25
Their
EverVolt power warranty guarantees that their panels will still produce
at least 92% of their original output by the end of the warranty term:
98% output at the end of year 1
No more than 0.25% degradation from years 2-25
Power output of 92% by year 25
Does Panasonic offer extended warranties?
Need
a little extra protection for peace of mind? Many solar panel
manufacturers offer extended warranties for their products. Depending on
the company and the product, extended warranties can come at an extra
cost, or only be available for certain installers who have been
certified and endorsed by the manufacturer.
Panasonic does not currently offer extended warranties for their solar panels.
Panasonic workmanship & labor warranty
More often than not, solar installers are the sole party responsible for providing workmanship warranties
for a solar installation. However, some manufacturers offer additional
protection by tacking on their own workmanship warranty for a limited
number of certified installers in their network – Panasonic is one of
these companies.
When
you purchase and install your solar system through a Panasonic
Authorized, Premium, or Elite installer, you can expect a 25-year labor
workmanship warranty backed by Panasonic. If you purchase Enphase
microinverters bundled with your Panasonic solar panels, this
workmanship warranty will extend to your entire solar system (although
the monitoring components will only be covered for five years).
You can learn more about manufacturer endorsements and how they impact installer warranty offerings in this article.
How to make a warranty claim with Panasonic: shipping & labor costs
Ideally,
your solar panel system will continue operating smoothly for 25+ years,
and you never have to worry about Panasonic’s warranty. However, if you
experience any defects or performance issues with your solar panel
system, Panasonic will be there to help.
If
you notice an issue with your system, your first phone call should be
to your original installer: having designed and installed your system,
they are the most equipped to diagnose (and fix!) any potential issue.
If
your installer determines that you need to replace a piece of
equipment–like a solar panel– they can file a warranty claim directly
with Panasonic on your behalf. Importantly, because Panasonic covers
labor and shipping costs under their warranty, you don’t need to worry
about paying any additional costs to get your system fixed. If, for
whatever reason, Panasonic cannot fix or replace your panel, they will
compensate you for reduced solar panel performance based on the number
of months since the original purchase date and the difference between
the power output and the minimal guaranteed output.
Unfortunately,
solar installers can go out of business, and you may find yourself in a
position where you can no longer call the business that installed your
system for help. In this case, you can work with Panasonic directly to
make a claim. Even in this situation, Panasonic will cover any costs
associated with the warranty claim. Their warranty claim filing process documentation breaks down everything you will need to send to Panasonic, including: a completed claim form and certain photos of your system, depending on the issue you’re experiencing.
It’s
worth pointing out that Panasonic’s labor coverage and reimbursement
offer is an outlier in the industry, and a good one at that: most solar
panel manufacturers do not cover any labor costs associated with
replacing or repairing their products. If your solar panel warranty
doesn’t cover labor reimbursement, this cost (and whether you’re
responsible for it) will typically fall under the umbrella of your
installer’s workmanship warranty. Be aware that workmanship warranties
vary from one installation company to the next, so remember to read your
installer’s workmanship warranty thoroughly before signing any
contract!
Limitations and exceptions to Panasonic’s warranty
Every
warranty has its exceptions – Panasonic’s is no different. Warranty
limitations aren’t meant to make it harder for you to take advantage of
the offering; companies simply try to protect themselves from unjust or
unreasonable claims.
Here are a few things that aren’t covered in your Panasonic warranty:
Damage caused by extreme weather events (i.e. earthquakes, typhoons, tornados, lightning, heavy snow, fire, etc.)
Damage
or corrosion from environmental pollution (i.e., soot, chemical vapor,
acid rain, etc.), direct contact with saltwater (i.e. ocean spray),
immersion in water (i.e. due to flooding), or mold
Damage caused by unapproved maintenance, repair or alteration
Products
that aren’t registered or don’t have evidence of purchase or
installation by a qualified licensed solar or electrical contractor
Cosmetic variations, strains, or scratches that do not affect power output
Damage due to neglect, vandalism, accident, animals, or external stress (i.e. from falling debris)
Other warranty considerations, and how Panasonic stacks up
Bankability:
Panasonic is a highly bankable, well-established consumer electronics
company with a diversity in product offerings and over 100 years of
history.
Escrows/insurance policies:
Panasonic does not provide information on whether they have insurance
policies or an escrow that ensures their warranties will be upheld if
they go out of business.
Customer reviews:
another critical aspect of understanding a manufacturer’s warranty
offering is investigating how their customers feel about their equipment
and the services that they provide. Any warranty can look promising on
paper, but how the installer or manufacturer performs when honoring
their warranty is also critically important. If you are interested in
reading Panasonic’s reviews, you can do so on their EnergySage company profile.
Finding the right solar panel system for your home means comparing multiple quotes from solar installers. Using the EnergySage Marketplace,
you can find local solar installers near you, and make easy
side-by-side comparisons of all your solar options, including equipment.
By shopping around first, you can find the right option at the right
price – warranties and all. If you have a preference for one type of
equipment over another–Panasonic or otherwise–simply note it in your
account when you sign up so installers can quote you accordingly.