Glossary
Glossary
Key terms and abbreviations used across the performance analytics pages.
Energy & Solar
PV
Photovoltaic — technology that converts sunlight directly into electricity using semiconductor solar cells.
kWp
Kilowatt-peak — the rated output power of a solar panel or system under Standard Test Conditions (STC: 1,000 W/m² irradiance, 25°C cell temperature). Measures installed capacity.
kWh
Kilowatt-hour — unit of energy. 1 kWh = 1 kW of power sustained for 1 hour. Used to measure actual energy produced or consumed.
MWh
Megawatt-hour — 1,000 kWh. Used for larger energy totals across longer periods.
Irradiance
The power of solar radiation hitting a surface, measured in W/m². Higher irradiance = more potential energy from panels.
GHI
Global Horizontal Irradiance — total solar radiation on a horizontal surface. Used as a reference for site potential.
POA
Plane of Array irradiance — solar radiation hitting the tilted panel surface directly. More relevant than GHI for actual yield calculations.
Specific Yield
Energy produced per unit of installed capacity (kWh/kWp). Normalises production so sites of different sizes can be fairly compared.
Target Yield
Theoretical energy a site should produce based on its location's historical irradiance data. Used as the denominator in PR calculations.
Performance Metrics
PR
Performance Ratio — measures how efficiently a PV system converts available solar energy into electricity. Formula: Actual Yield ÷ Target Yield × 100. A PR of 80% means the site produced 80% of its theoretical maximum. Losses come from temperature, wiring, inverter inefficiency, downtime, and soiling.
Fleet PR
Average Performance Ratio across all monitored sites in the portfolio for a given period.
Expected PR
The benchmark PR set in the asset metadata (often 75–85%). Used to flag sites underperforming relative to their design specification.
Loss Waterfall
A breakdown of energy losses from theoretical maximum down to actual output, categorised by cause: grid downtime, plant downtime, inverter underperformance, soiling, clipping, curtailment, and unclassified losses.
Soiling Loss
Energy lost because dust, dirt, or debris on the panel surface reduces the amount of sunlight reaching the cells.
Clipping Loss
Energy wasted when the inverter limits (clips) the output because the PV array is generating more power than the inverter can convert.
Curtailment
Intentional reduction of output, typically due to grid constraints or operator instruction.
Battery & Storage
BESS
Battery Energy Storage System — rechargeable battery installation that stores surplus solar energy for use when the sun is not shining.
SoC
State of Charge — the current charge level of a battery as a percentage of its total capacity (0% = empty, 100% = fully charged).
Charge Power
Rate at which energy is being stored into the battery (kW). Positive = charging.
Discharge Power
Rate at which energy is being drawn from the battery (kW). Positive = discharging.
System & Service Models
SaaS
Solar as a Service — Daystar delivers solar energy as a managed service. The system typically consists of PV panels and optionally a battery; the client pays for energy, not equipment.
PaaS
Power as a Service — Daystar delivers reliable power from multiple sources (solar, grid, generator) as a single managed service. More complex than SaaS; involves hybrid energy management.
Genset
Generator set — a diesel or gas-powered backup generator used when solar and battery cannot meet load demand, common in PaaS deployments.
ATS
Automatic Transfer Switch — automatically switches the site between power sources (solar/battery ↔ generator ↔ grid) without manual intervention.
Operations & People
NOC
Network Operations Centre — the team that remotely monitors all sites, triages alerts, raises tickets, and coordinates field responses.
FSE
Field Service Engineer — the technician who physically travels to and works on sites to carry out repairs, preventive maintenance, and inspections.
SLA
Service Level Agreement — contractual time targets for responding to and resolving incidents. E.g. Critical = respond within 2 hours, resolve within 24 hours.
MTTR
Mean Time to Repair — the average time taken to restore a system to operation after a fault. A key maintenance efficiency metric.
OT Head
Operations & Technology Head — senior stakeholder responsible for technical operations at the client organisation.
GHoF
Group Head of Facilities — senior client stakeholder responsible for site facilities management.
PC Manager
Project Coordinator Manager — client-side project manager overseeing the Daystar engagement.
Data & Platform
AMMP
Asset Monitoring & Management Platform — the external IoT monitoring platform used by Daystar. Provides live telemetry, performance KPIs, alerts, and historical energy data via REST API.
Telemetry
Automated real-time data transmitted from on-site devices (inverters, meters, sensors) to the AMMP platform via a local data logger.
Data Quality
A measure of how recently a site sent data to AMMP. Statuses: OK (<1h old), Warning (1–6h), Stale (6–24h), Offline (>24h). Sites that go "dark" are monitoring blind spots.
Asset ID
The unique UUID assigned to each site in the AMMP platform. Required to fetch any AMMP data for that site.
CO₂ Offset
Tonnes of CO₂ emissions avoided by generating solar energy instead of drawing from the fossil-fuel-based grid. Calculated as: PV generation (kWh) × grid emission factor (kgCO₂/kWh) ÷ 1000.
co2_offset_factor
Per-asset emission factor (tCO₂/kWh) configured in AMMP. If this is not set for a site, the Environmental Impact section will show no data.
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