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Brazil’s CCEE wants off-grid regulation update

  • : Electricity
  • 22/12/05

Brazil's chamber of electric energy commercialization (CCEE) is pressing for a change in the rules for distributed generation ahead of the power sector's next round of liberalization opening up new opportunities to smaller consumers.

CCEE said the timing to revisit the regulations for distributed generation is ideal because the impending market opening for residential consumers will involve several regulatory revisions. The current regulation ties distributed generation units to the captive market.

Brazil is debating a timetable to allow low-voltage consumers — households and small businesses — to choose their power suppliers and sign bilateral contracts for their electricity demand.

Some argue that the liberalization process can be kickstarted with ordinances, while others say there needs to be a bill regulating the market's opening. The mines and energy ministry held a public consultation on the matter from 3 October to 3 November, receiving feedback from 20 market participants.

The ministry had previously opened a public consultation in the same mold regarding the high voltage market's liberalization, which resulted in an ordinance allowing high-voltage consumers to migrate to bilateral contracts starting in 2024.

One of the most "appealing" possibilities for distributed generation would be to allow these power producers to sell their surplus power in the free market, CCEE said. This would encourage smaller consumers to invest in distributed generation if they had the opportunity to make money selling capacity for the grid. The chamber also recognizes there would need to be careful regulatory and taxation revisions.

There are 57,000 distributed generation units among the 169,000 high voltage consumers that will be allowed to migrate in 2024, according to CCEE data. These units would also not be allowed to buy power from free market suppliers under the current regulation.

The market's liberalization will only bring more investment opportunities for the distributed generation sector, according to Brazil's distributed generation association (ABGD) chairman Carlos Evangelista. Distributed generation companies are mainly specialized in installing solar panels and the opening of the sector would not hinder that activity, he said.

Distributed generation regulatory revisions to allow more integration with the free market are not on the radar screen for most low-voltage consumers, said Donato Filho, managing director of power efficiency company Volt Robotics. But the idea behind the market liberalization is that all consumers will be allowed to buy power from their choice of suppliers, he said.


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