Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 23 January 2026
📘 Source: TimesLIVE

SA’s commercial solar boom has created a multibillion-rand industry almost overnight. But behind the glossy marketing, clean-energy promises, and grid-independence sales pitches, a quieter problem is unfolding — one that engineers and insurers say is costing businesses far more than they realise. Technical specialists atAlumo Energywarn that many systems being installed on commercial rooftops today are fundamentally unsafe.

And this is not because of faulty hardware, but because critical engineering work is skipped altogether. As companies scramble for relief from load-shedding and SA’s persistently unreliable power supply, some installers cut corners, leaving buildings exposed to electrical fires, equipment failure, and non-compliance with municipal and Eskom standards. Industry insiders call this a predictable by-product of a market moving too fast.

Solar is increasingly sold as a plug-and-play commodity, but commercial installations are anything but simple. Every warehouse, shopping centre, or office block has its own load profile, structural limits, cabling routes, and environmental risks. Without proper engineering, systems can be mismatched from day one, operating outside warranty conditions, overheating under load, or collapsing during a lightning surge.

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One of the clearest warning signs is missing or incomplete engineering packs. These documents — which include structural drawings, cable specifications, and single-line diagrams — are non-negotiable. They guide installers, inform future maintenance teams, and set the boundaries of what a system can safely deliver.

Yet, many businesses never receive them. In a highly competitive market, shortcuts often start with reduced cable thickness, pushing inverters beyond design limits, or treating earthing and surge protection as optional. Consequences can be severe.

Alumocites a case where a lightning strike at a large residence ignited a small flame; proper fireproof trunking and surge protection prevented a full-scale roof fire. Risks extend beyond safety. Systems that don’t meet municipal or Eskom requirements face penalties, forced shutdowns, or denial of future grid-integration approvals.

Many businesses discover these issues only when expanding systems or applying for feed-in tariffs. Inadequate monitoring compounds the problem. Solar components may carry 10- to 25-year warranties, but these are meaningless if systems aren’t inspected after commissioning. Without monitoring, minor faults go unnoticed until they become costly outages.

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Originally published by TimesLIVE • January 23, 2026

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