Eskom has made a U-turn on its stance to impose fines on customers who had not registered their solar installations with the utility by the end of March 2026. The decision to halt the issuing of fines comes after heavy criticism from the Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) about the bulk power utility’s threat to disconnect or impose fines on customers. Did Eskom ever have the lawful authority to impose fines on unregistered customers?
Chris Yelland, Managing Director at EE Business Intelligence, inconversationwith Outa CEO Wayne Duvenage, said Eskom does not have the authority to cut people off. “And I want to say clearly, first of all, Eskom does not have the authority to fine a customer. There is nothing in law that empowers Eskom to impose fines.
The courts can impose fines, but Eskom as a company registered in terms of the Companies Act, cannot issue a fine.” Yelland said Eskom has the power to cut customers off under specific reasons. However, not registering solar installations is not one of them. Eskom has reportedly withdrawn its threats about either cutting customers off or issuing fines.
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According to Kevin Pillay, Eskom’s Distribution general manager for the central and east cluster, the utility has decided to hold off on issuing fines to customers who remain unregistered by the end of March. He was speaking on theMoney Showlast month. Pillay claimed that the power utility was encouraging customers to come forward voluntarily rather than treating solar systems as an illegal connection.
The utility is currently waiving registration fees until 31 March 2026 for small-scale embedded generation (SSEG), including the cost of a bidirectional smart meter and safety verification requirements. “All registration and connection fees of up to R10 000, including a free smart meter, are waived until 31 March 2026 for Eskom household customer solar systems up to 50kVA,” said the utility last month.
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