Solaren spotlights the hidden gap between installed solar capacity and usable power
By AI, Created 5:19 PM UTC, May 18, 2026, /AGP/ – Solaren Renewable Energy Solutions says many Southeast Asian commercial and industrial facilities have enough capacity on paper but still struggle to use that power reliably in day-to-day operations. The company says the mismatch can raise demand charges, stress equipment and limit the value of solar upgrades.
Why it matters: - Commercial and industrial sites can look adequately powered on paper while still facing real-world constraints during production spikes, load swings and electrical instability. - The gap can increase electricity costs, because short demand spikes can set billing benchmarks for an entire cycle. - The problem can also reduce the value of solar investments if facilities do not address power quality and demand management.
What happened: - Solaren Renewable Energy Solutions Corporation said it has identified a systemic derating gap affecting power-intensive businesses across Southeast Asia. - The Manila-area company said the issue applies to factories, cold storage operators, food manufacturers and industrial facilities. - Solaren said the problem was detailed in a feature published in Entrepreneur India. - The company said it has more than 85 megawatts installed across 2,500 installations in the Philippines.
The details: - Many commercial sites track transformer ratings, generator capacities and grid connection approvals, but those figures can overstate what the facility can reliably use in normal operations. - Voltage fluctuations can force motors to draw more current than rated loads would require. - Phase imbalances can let transformers carry loads that do not translate into productive output. - Harmonic distortions from non-linear equipment can cause cables and protection systems to act conservatively before rated limits are reached. - Utility demand charges can be set by a short-duration peak, even if the spike was caused by uneven load distribution or a transient voltage event. - Solaren said it has seen the pattern across its client base, which includes Toyota, Oishi, McDonald’s and Dunkin’. - Facilities with grid-tied solar reduced energy consumption reliably, but sites with dynamic load profiles or weak power factor correction still faced demand charge exposure and equipment stress. - Solaren said closing the gap requires more than adding generation capacity. - The company pointed to power factor correction, harmonic filtering, accurate load profiling and battery storage configured for demand management. - Solaren said it is a DOE-accredited, PCAB-licensed solar EPC company headquartered in Tarlac, Philippines. - The company said it serves manufacturing, food service, retail, logistics and public infrastructure clients. - Solaren said it holds the Asian Power Award for Solar Power Project of the Year.
Between the lines: - The message goes beyond solar deployment and toward electrical system quality. - For industrial customers, the practical constraint may be not how much power is installed, but how much can be used without penalties, instability or equipment strain. - That makes energy storage and power-quality equipment part of the operating strategy, not just the sustainability plan.
What’s next: - Solaren is positioning its work around system-level fixes that improve usable capacity, not just installed capacity. - Facilities facing peak demand charges or electrical instability may need audits that combine load profiling, power-quality checks and storage planning. - The company is likely to keep using client examples and project experience to push that message across Southeast Asia.
Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.
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