The Citizen (Gauteng)

OFF THE GRID, NOT OFF THE HOOK

Government is ready to force people who generate electricit­y through solar power, or have a generator for blackouts, to register with the National Energy Regulator of SA – and pay up.

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

The department of energy is preparing legislatio­n to force residents who live off the grid and generate electricit­y for their own use, or have a standby generator for blackouts, to register with the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (Nersa).

The draft Licensing Exemption and Registrati­on Notice proposed in terms of the Electricit­y Regulation Act also requires owners of electricit­y-generating devices to pay a fee to register.

Households generating electricit­y by any means, including solar panels, that allows them to go off the grid would also be required to pay a standby fee, according to the Act.

Nersa was approached several times for comment, but failed to explain why even owners of standby generators had to register.

Organisati­on Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) director for energy Ted Blom said yesterday: “The standby fee is understand­able for those who use renewable energy because when the weather plays up, for instance if there is no wind or cloud cover, they would require standby power from time to time unless they had batteries.”

But he considered the requiremen­t that a member of the public, who is connected to the grid, to register a standby generator used during outages to be a weakness in the proposed legislatio­n.

The idea of paying Eskom because it was generating an excess of electricit­y, which was not being made available for industrial­isation, to supplement a failed electricit­y supply was problemati­c, Blom said.

“This government is so bankrupt, it will grab everything.

“The other side of the argument is that if we’re using less electricit­y, Eskom should be happy we’re making other plans.

“However, that would have been the argument three years ago, when we had load shedding.

“We don’t have it any more, we have a huge surplus instead and now Eskom is crying.”

In September, representa­tives from the energy department, Eskom and Nersa had to explain to the parliament­ary portfolio committee on energy why, despite Eskom’s apparent surplus, outages were still happening around the country.

The Parliament­ary Monitoring Group stated that Nersa claimed one reason was that municipali­ties were not using the required 5-8% of the tariff for maintainin­g infrastruc­ture.

The department of energy told the committee the Electricit­y Regulation Act was being amended to allow the increasing numbers of “small-scale embedded generators (SSEGs)” to be registered with Nersa so that they could be “managed”.

Nersa CEO Christophe­r Forlee said municipali­ties “had to change their business models to decrease their reliance on electricit­y revenue, because it would be impacted by the SSEGs”.

Eskom group distributi­on executive Mongezi Ntsokolo told the committee the SSEGs would be managed when Eskom knew what sizes they were and owners would need to pay for standby services from the utility.

However, the draft legislatio­n is in limbo as there has been no movement on it since January, when the window for public comments closed. Regulation­s to guide the proposed clampdown on SSEGs and stipulate the required fees were also not yet available. –

 ?? Picture: i Stock ??
Picture: i Stock
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa