The Herald (South Africa)

Capetonian­s pocket more than R25m selling solar power to city

- Bobby Jordan

Cape Town businesses and households have earned more than R25m for their excess solar PV power since the start of the 2022/2023 financial year under the city’s “cash for power” programme.

Cape Town became the first metro to offer cash payments for excess power generated via solar PV installati­ons — in addition to municipal bill credits up to a zero balance — being fed back into the grid.

Businesses have benefited from the scheme since June last year and now residents can too.

Previously, the city purchased excess power from commercial and residentia­l small-scale generation, but only to offset clients’ electricit­y bills up to a zero balance.

Businesses and private households that elect to do so can now earn money over and above that.

“The city will buy as much solar power as households and businesses can sell to us under the cash for power programme, with 25-million kilowatt-hours (kWh) already bought as at February 1,” mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said yesterday.

“In the 2022/2023 financial year, we paid more than R10.5m to Capetonian­s for their power, and in the current financial year we’ve already paid over R8.8m.

“That’s a total of R19.4m just on the feed-in tariff alone, plus a further R6.4m when including the 25c per kWh incentive we’ve added to encourage participat­ion.”

There are 1,461 sellers benefiting from the scheme, of which 869 are residentia­l and 592 commercial.

The incentive is part of a longer-term plan to add up to 1GW of independen­t power supply in the city over time, “with the first 650MW of this within five years”.

This would be enough to protect against four stages of load-shedding. “We are transition­ing this city’s energy mix to a far more decentrali­sed supply of reliable, cost-effective and increasing­ly carbonneut­ral energy that will come from a diverse range of suppliers,” Hill-Lewis said.

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