Its been somewhat of a shell games with the "rules" always changing. At first they required FSEC to approve each system, after some lobbying, they dropped that requirement, but I know FSEC is NOT happy about that
The wording is a system must meet the state interconnect requirements and the application does ask for the electric company that your connecting to, I'm pretty sure DEP will contact the electric company to make sure your hooked up and legal
You can contact
Jim.Tatum@dep.state.fl.us to clairy anything, but don't just assume you don't have to be legal with your power company. In Orlando, I pretty sure they DON'T do net metering and will have to have dual meters and only get the wholesale rate on power sent into the grid
Here in Lakeland, they do have net metering, I was the first residentional system, online in 2002 and it was a struggle to get the agreement done. Things like liability insurance requirements can cost more than the energy value sent back.
Talk with the DEP, talk with your city and town for permiting and talk with your electric company. Failure to do this could forfit your getting the 20K
Also, master electricians around here know nothing about gridtie or UL1741/NEC 690 and have never see or installed solar electic systems. If your master electrican is a "buddy" letting you do the install, be warned, it can be ugly getting your system corrected for proper installation. Another area that can be a real hassel is the panel mounting .. if your putting them on your roof, you will need a PE engineer to evaluate you roof loading and tie down methods. With the upgraded hurricane codes, it can be a challenge to meet the uplift load on a roof for 110mph. Going with ground mounts is better, for this and peformance reasons.
In general, rebate programs have processes, rules that are to make sure the state dollars go into professional installed, permited and legally interconnected systems. Miss to dot and "i" or cross a "t" and you might be on the hook for 20K