MEDIA RELEASE

All South Africans, from peaceful pensioner to street vendor barber and large business owners, are under pressure to oppose the New Nersa regulations for small-scale embedded generators (SSEG Rules) as provision for public comments closes on 31 May 2018.

Under these rules, which have been in the pipeline for months, is the requirement for all owners/buyers of small-scale “electricity generators” less than 1 MW to make an application for the establishment of the installation to their local distributor (municipality or Eskom) and then to register with Nersa.

“I view the rules as draconian,” says Ted Blom, a partner at Mining & Energy Advisors, “as they apply to all small installations, whether for private or public use and whether they are to be connected to the grid or not”.

Blom highlights that the definitions and rules are far too wide as they essentially extend right down to micro-solar chargers for cell phones. The definitions are also not clear as they demand registration of all devices, yet only describe the procedure to be followed for GRID linked devices.

The ambit of these regulations is similar to the unworkable and failed Gauteng e-Toll regulations yet far wider in that they apply to almost all 55 million South Africans in all nine provinces. “These rules are poorly drafted and unworkable and will result in wide-scale civil disobedience if promulgated,” warns Blom.

Such regulations will result in a permitting system, and eventually, licence fees will be instituted to fund policing of installations. This added cost will give rise to yet another financial burden for ordinary SA citizens, which Blom makes clear “is a regrettable situation which we will challenge”.