NERSA Responds to Ministers Small-scale Generation Licenses Call

  • In response to the Minister of Energy’s announcement granting deviation from the existing IRP 2010-2030 for licensing of operation for generation facilities ranging above 1MW to 10MW, NERSA announced that it will follow due process, and will adhere to the legal prescripts in evaluating all licence applications as well as registration applications for small-scale embedded generation.

The South African energy regulator NERSA has confirmed that it has received a letter from the Minister of Energy on 2 May 2019, granting deviation from the existing IRP 2010-2030 for licensing of operation for generation facilities ranging above 1MW to 10MW.

In a statement released today NERSA points out that the Minister did not direct NERSA to automatically approve licence applications for operation of small-scale generation facilities without following due process. This clarifies various interpretations given by stakeholders that NERSA is directed to licence these facilities immediately without delay.

In terms of section 10(2)(g) of the Electricity Regulation Act, 2006 (Act No. 4 of 2006), the Minister has powers to approve deviation from compliance with the Integrated Resource Plan, and with this letter, the Minister exercised these powers.

To give effect to this deviation, NERSA announced that it will follow due process, and adhere to the legal prescripts in evaluating all licence applications as well as registration applications for small-scale embedded generation, as contemplated in section 10 of the National Energy Regulator Act, 2004 (Act No. 40 of 2004), read with the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 2000 (Act No. 3 of 2000) and the Electricity Regulation Act of 2006.

Applications received for facilities up to 1MW will go through the NERSA-approved registration procedure and will require the payment of the prescribed registration fee.

In this regard, applicants are expected to comply with the relevant/applicable pieces of legislation by providing relevant and sufficient information. This will enable the Energy Regulator to conduct a thorough and efficient evaluation of the applications.

NERSA is planning to conduct a stakeholder workshop in order to provide clarity on its processes and information required to evaluate these applications on time. The date of the workshop will be communicated in due course.

The registration procedure for small-scale embedded generators is available on NERSA’s website (www.nersa.org.za ) under Electricity > Licences > Registration application procedure and the registration application form is available under Electricity > Licences > Registration application forms.

The application form for generation licence facilities above 1MW up to 10MW can be accessed under Electricity > Licences > Application forms.

Author: Bryan Groenendaal

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