South Africa’s efforts to advance residential solar adoption may be imperilled by persistent regulatory and administrative inefficiencies, despite Eskom’s recent announcement to extend its waiver of registration fees for Small-Scale Embedded Generation (SSEG) systems until March 2026.
Although the waiver ostensibly supports the transition towards decentralised renewable energy, industry stakeholders such as Alumo Energy, a leading solar solutions provider, argue that the practical impact of this measure remains limited. According to Alumo Energy’s CEO, Rein Snoeck Henkemans, unresolved municipal backlogs, regulatory uncertainty, and the absence of a cohesive national process continue to pose significant impediments to households seeking to install photovoltaic (PV) systems.
While the fee exemption aims to reduce financial entry barriers, the reality on the ground reveals systemic administrative weaknesses, especially at the municipal level. In municipalities such as Tshwane, applicants face considerable delays, with some residents awaiting approval since 2022. Alumo reports that despite submitting documentation repeatedly on behalf of clients, no confirmed registrations have materialised. This suggests that the absence of digital infrastructure and capacity within municipal offices continues to hinder the effective implementation of national energy policies.
Cape Town has made progress through the establishment of an online registration portal, but challenges persist, including software glitches and protracted approval times. Other jurisdictions lack digital systems altogether, leaving applicants without clear guidance or predictable timelines. These bottlenecks undermine public confidence in the regulatory environment and discourage investment in renewable technologies.
A further concern involves the technical sign-off requirements imposed on SSEG installations. Current guidelines from the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (NERSA), supported by Eskom, stipulate that a registered engineer or technologist must certify the Embedded Generator Installation (EGI) report to ensure safety. However, South Africa’s limited pool of qualified engineers and the high fees they command raise questions about the practicality of this requirement for residential projects.
In practice, this condition often translates into increased costs and further delays. Snoeck Henkemans argues that qualified electricians—already authorised to issue Certificates of Compliance (CoCs) for domestic electrical systems—should be allowed to certify standard residential PV installations. He contends that imposing engineering sign-offs on all residential systems represents an overextension, particularly when safety can be ensured through existing professional standards for electricians.
In parallel, concerns remain over the functional scope of the free smart meters Eskom has promised to deploy. Specifically, there is insufficient clarity as to whether these devices will support bi-directional energy measurement—essential for tracking energy fed back into the grid and thus benefiting from Eskom’s Homeflex tariff. Without this capability, consumers may forfeit financial returns from exporting surplus energy.
Equally contentious is Eskom’s assertion of financial savings under the fee waiver. Critics note that many of the supposed economic benefits are deferred and contingent on future costs that are not yet in effect. Moreover, under the Homeflex tariff structure, both compliant and non-compliant households currently face the same fixed monthly charge of R368, removing a significant incentive for consumers to register and comply with regulations.
While the intent behind these initiatives is commendable, the execution remains fraught with procedural complexity, economic disincentives, and structural inadequacies. As a result, the current framework risks slowing rather than accelerating South Africa’s shift towards a more sustainable energy mix.
Snoeck Henkemans stresses that regulatory reform must not come at the expense of safety or compliance, but he calls for a rationalisation of the process—one that is clear, efficient, and accessible to the average homeowner. A more unified national system, grounded in transparency and practical enforceability, is essential if the country is to meet its renewable energy ambitions.
If South Africa is to realise the promise of energy independence and resilience, stakeholders argue that the red tape enveloping solar adoption must be systematically dismantled and replaced with streamlined, equitable, and forward-thinking policies that truly empower consumers.