Energy consumption profile
Strategic & ESG Rationale
System design & business impact
Financial model (Capex, IRR, payback)
Procurement & financing options
Risk assessment & mitigation
ESG reporting metrics
Delivery roadmap
A commercial solar board submission is a formal investment document used to secure approval from executive leadership or a board of directors for a solar and battery project. It goes far beyond a technical proposal, acting as a structured business case that aligns energy data, financial modelling, risk management, and ESG strategy into a single decision-making framework.
For ESG and Sustainability Managers, this document is essential for building internal buy-in. It must clearly demonstrate that the project is not only technically viable but financially sound, strategically aligned, and operationally practical. In most organisations, it is the last step that determines whether a renewable energy initiative moves from concept to capital approval.
Every strong submission begins with real energy data.
At Smart, we like to use the past 12-24 months of your electricity data (interval data, bills, operational insights) to identify:
Where possible, we strengthen this with energy audits, sub-metering, and efficiency metrics (e.g. kWh per m²).
This ensures the system we design is correctly sized and aligned to your actual operations, not assumptions: a key requirement for board confidence.
Boards approve outcomes, not infrastructure.
Your submission will stand a better chance of success if it clearly explains why the project matters, such as:
Position the project as a strategic investment, not a cost. This reframes solar from an expense into a driver of long-term value.
Technical detail is important, but it must be communicated in business terms.
Outline:
Then connect this to outcomes:
Boards do not need engineering depth, they need confidence in performance, reliability, and impact.
This is the most heavily scrutinised section.
A strong financial model should include:
Key Metrics:
Also include value drivers such as:
Government incentives (e.g. STCs)
The objective is clear: demonstrate that the project delivers strong, predictable financial returns and has the numbers to back it up.
Boards need clarity on how the project will be funded. Smart offers multiple financing options that can draw on CapEx or OpEx budgets. These include:
Each option should outline:
Cash flow impact
This allows decision-makers to align the project with internal financial strategy.
A credible submission must show that risks are understood and controlled.
Key risks include:
Grid connection delays
Mitigation measures may include:
Boards do not expect zero risk; they expect managed risk.
For ESG-driven organisations – and let’s face it, these days most organisations are obliged to be - measurable outcomes are essential.
Your submission should quantify:
And outline how performance will be tracked through:
This ensures the project delivers transparent, ongoing value.
Finally, show how the project will be executed.
Include a structured roadmap:
Support this with:
This builds confidence that the project is deliverable, low-risk, and professionally managed. Smart can provide this information via our pre-sales engineering team.
A successful commercial solar board submission brings together:
When done well, it allows decision-makers to confidently approve a project that delivers both financial returns and long-term sustainability outcomes.
Approval comes down to one question: Is this the right strategic investment for the organisation?
Your submission should make that answer clear.