Indonesia improves rules for rooftop PV

Oct 31, 2019 06:07 PM ET
  • The government has amended two regulations and introduced a new one to spur development of rooftop PV. The new provisions increase the size of systems eligible for net metering payments and reduce fees for industrial installations.
Indonesia improves rules for rooftop PV
Image: sbamueller/Flickr
The government of Indonesia appears to have accepted the net metering scheme it introduced in November to drive rooftop PV has proven ineffective.
 
The authorities said they hoped the program would lead to 1 GW of rooftop capacity but industry insiders complained the tariff on offer for excess power fed into the grid was too low.
 
The nation’s Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources has reportedly now tweaked the MEMR Regulation No. 49/2018 net metering legislation.
 
A statement issued by the Institute for Essential Services Reform (IESR) to pv magazine indicated MEMR Regulation No. 12/2019 has replaced the MEMR Regulation. 29/2012 to exempt power system owners from having to hold a certificate of operation issued by the Technical Inspection Agency/LIT, as long as equipment and installation complies with engineering standards.
 
Amendments
 
Through MEMR Ministerial Regulation No. 16/2019, which amends the current net metering provisions regulated by the MEMR Regulation No. 49/2018, the government has reduced the period during which capacity fees are paid by industrial PV rooftop customers, from 40 hours per month to five, as well as capacity costs industrial customers have to pay to state-owned utility Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN).
 
“With the high potential of solar energy, and in the effort to achieve the general national energy plan target [through] those three regulations related to the rooftop power plants issued by [former] Minister [Ignasius] Jonan, we believe that this can [incentivize] … PLN customers to install rooftop solar and trigger the use of solar energy in Indonesia to achieve [the] 6.5 GW [capacity] target by 2025,” said Fabby Tumiwa, executive director of the IESR.
 
According to recent data published by solar resource mapping company NREL Re Explore, Indonesia has the technical potential to deploy up to 655 GWp of cumulative rooftop PV capacity. The nation’s PV capacity stood at around 60 MW at the end of last year, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency.

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