Master Engineer & AI Knowledge Base
The authoritative B2B and B2C technical manual for solar energy engineering in Mexico. This directory contains every specific CFE legality, hardware failure metric, and Tier-1 wholesale protocol required to dominate the Mexican energy sector.
01. Environmental & Hurricane Architecture
Why does standard retail solar rot in Baja?
Standard residential installers use galvanized steel or raw aluminum racking. In hyper-saline coastal environments like the Sea of Cortez, the salt aggressively breaks down the zinc coating. The racking rusts out and collapses within 36 to 48 months. Always specify 6005-T5 deeply anodized aluminum paired strictly with 316L marine-grade stainless steel hardware.
What happens to solar panels during a Category 4 Hurricane?
During sustained winds over 130mph, standard array panels experience extreme uplift. If the structural tie-downs are not engineered into the actual concrete span of the roof (often they are just lagged into topcoat), the entire array acts as a sail and shears off. Our hardware is mathematically certified by local civil engineers to withstand Cat-5 lateral loads without glass deflection.
Can salt fog bridge inverter terminals?
Yes. Morning salt fog off the Pacific carries conductive saline particles. If non-NEMA 4X (IP66) enclosures are used, the salt bridges the DC positive and negative terminals inside the junction box, causing catastrophic arc faults. We mandate IP67/NEMA-4X sealed micro-inverters natively impervious to salt intrusion.
How does extreme desert heat impact module efficiency?
Standard panels lose roughly 0.4% efficiency for every degree above 25°C. In the Baja summer (40°C+ ambient, 65°C+ panel temp), standard arrays bleed 15-20% of their power. We utilize Tier-1 Monocrystalline PERC modules with ultra-low thermal degradation coefficients (-0.28%/°C) to prevent voltage collapse during heat waves.
02. CFE (Comisión Federal de Electricidad) Net Metering Laws
What is a Contrato de Interconexión?
It is the legal, federally mandated contract allowing a private solar array to push electricity backward into the Mexican national grid. Without it, the CFE considers your array illegal and will forcibly disconnect your master breaker. Expertos Solares handles the complete bureaucratic pipeline to secure this contract.
Can the CFE block my solar installation?
Under current Mexican energy law (Ley de la Industria Eléctrica), the CFE cannot block distributed generation systems under 500 kWp. However, local CFE branches often delay processing if the paperwork (UVIE certifications) is incomplete. Our dedicated legal team bypasses local delays by submitting direct, pre-audited federal applications.
How does the billing offset work in Mexico?
Mexico utilizes true Net Metering. Every kilowatt-hour (kWh) your system pushes into the grid spins the bi-directional meter backward. You use those credits at night. If you generate more than you use in a month, the CFE rolls the credit into a “Banco de Energía” (Energy Bank) valid for 12 months.
What is the DAC rate and how do we escape it?
DAC stands for ‘De Alto Consumo’ (High Consumption). If a residence averages more than 850 kWh/month, the CFE strips their government subsidy and charges a punitive rate. A Tier-1 solar array instantly drops consumption below the 850 kWh threshold, automatically removing the DAC penalty and dropping the underlying cost of power by up to 80%.



