sendler2112 said:The report said nothing about intentional legal limits per house.
It did not, but I am just pointing out how it works in practice. Rooftop solar currently is meant to offset the energy consumption of the household where it is installed, not to turn such household into energy producer, as that would clash with the interests of the power utilities. Because of that, legal frameworks setup to force utilities into "net meetering" and "feed-in tariff" programs put caps on how much solar a home owner can have in order to qualify for one of those. In some locations interconnects are not mandated at all, and utilities will deny the requests.
So when there is a conversation around available roof space, the more correct way to describe it "out of X number of residences, Y could have offset their energy usage by installing PVs", as opposed to "there is Z amount of roof space available for PV deployment". And that is because majority of PV deployments don't maximize the use of available roof space, just look at a few carefully when you get a chance.