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Going off Eskom’s power grid: Sorry I’m on solar, but it’s the best thing under the sun

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Shapshak is editor-in-chief of Stuff.co.za and executive director of Scrolla.Africa

Going off-grid isn’t entirely cost-effective, but we’re 80% there and it has freed us from Eskom’s rolling blackouts.

First published in the Daily Maverick 168 weekly newspaper.

Now that my new solar household has lived through several cycles of Eskom’s unpredictable load shedding, I can report back on the experience. But first, I have to apologise. It’s the same apology I felt I had to make after I had fibre installed in our home.

Suddenly, I know what it’s like to live in the same suburb as a Cabinet minister or Eskom manager. When the rest of the neighbourhood WhatsApp group started the usual “has anyone got power?” questions, we had power.

We have power. We always have power. I feel guilty. I’m Jewish, I can’t help it.

The first time that rolling blackouts happened (let’s call them what they are) and the grid went down, only I noticed. I was waiting for it, thanks to a notification from arguably the most important SA-developed app, Eskom se Push (if not for the witty punny name alone). Everyone else was busy, but I stopped at the anointed time and went walking around the house to see what tripped or if it anything tripped at all. Nothing.

The only noticeable change was when someone opened a tap and there was no water. As I’ve learnt more and more about the subtle dance of usage (load) versus charging the batteries – usually from the solar panels but sometimes directly from the grid when there are rolling blackout warnings – it is a constant dance of variables.

We took the plunge earlier this year when my wife quite rightly pointed out: “It’s the right thing to do and we’ll save money every time Eskom increases its tariffs.” We chose Elite Energy Solutions, the same four-generation family of electricians-turned-solar enthusiasts who installed the system for my parents-in-law two years ago. At first, I mistakenly thought the amount of time Chris Liebenberg, its technical director, spent fiddling with their system was a sign that the technology wasn’t ready.

But since our installation about two months ago, I have realised that installing a solar system isn’t the kind of install-and-leave setup we’re used to with a new DStv dish or fibre connection.

A solar system is a living beast, I now know, luckily one I haven’t had to master myself. Liebenberg logs into the two black steel cabinets in our garage whenever he gets blackout alerts. He checks they are switching over to “power up the batteries from whatever source you can” mode so that when said blackouts roll on up, our house always has power.

No wonder Liebenberg jokes that he’ll be friends with his clients for 20 years. But he’s exactly the kind of friend you need to help you go off-grid.

Going solar is an ongoing process that my wife and I are abundantly happy we’ve done. It pains me to think that anyone who can afford to will go off the electricity grid – robbing Eskom of yet more income, but rewarding those who can win a time trip back to 2006, before the #Load-Shitting began.

“When load shedding first began in 2007, it was a surprise for nearly everyone,” South Africa’s sagest political columnist, Stephen Grootes, wrote in December 2019. “But the people in charge of Eskom, energy and government at the time had no excuse for their ignorance. Nine years before, in 1998, an Energy White Paper had predicted that ‘for an assumed demand growth of 4.2%, Eskom’s present generation capacity surplus will be fully utilised by about 2007’”.

Every time Eskom increases its tariffs – or we see Johannesburg City Power’s 14.59% increase from July 1 – it drives more people who are fed up, or can afford it, or small business owners who can’t afford it, towards going solar.

My father-in-law calculated that Eskom’s fees have increased 43% in the two years since Elite Energy installed their solar. Every increase makes going solar more affordable. I’ll ask my friend Hillel – the Jewish accountant who, unlike me, speaks maths as a first language – for an answer the next time I write about this.

I read with horror in last weekend’s DM168 about the ongoing train wreck that is Johannesburg’s power problems, and the looming disaster with the water system.

I’ve felt equally guilty all the times the neighbourhood WhatsApp group has flared up over water outages. When we bought our house, it already had a borehole, which we filter before using in the house – thanks to pump guru JP Storbeck.

To be connected to the water network, the City of Johannesburg charges each house just under R1,000 a month. Before you even use any water. And if the water is flowing, with 55,863 pipe bursts during its 2020/21 period, as Ferial Haffajee wrote.

Eskom, as experts have warned us, is only the tip of the iceberg. Wait, they warned, until the water problems become apparent. Now they have. DM168

This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper which is available for free to Pick n Pay Smart Shoppers at these Pick n Pay stores.

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Wilhelm Boshoff says:

    Peace of mind!

  • Fanie Tshabalala says:

    Yes well. Vote for the DA. They ain’t perfect, but they have ideas, plans and can manage a city. The other lot are utterly incompetent, and they steal (to quote a famous South African industrialist).

    • R S says:

      Agreed. Moving to the WC over a decade ago was the best decision I ever made. Now I just need to convince my family about investing in solar…

  • Alan Paul says:

    Absolutely Spot-On with your decision to install solar, we decided to go OFF-GRID months ago, now we have power continuously. And the payback period is expected tp be 4 years and a few months – very well worth the Investment. I recommend that to everyone.

  • Alley Cat says:

    I too feel guilty as I have just installed a solar system and I’m not Jewish.
    I am interested in the calculation of payback, I speak mathematics and accounting and try as I might, I couldn’t get the PV system better than 8 years even assuming a 15% increase per year from Eskom. That said, my usage is very low, so I am not paying the exorbitant cost of >600kWh.
    The fastest payback was on the 200l solar geyser… Around 18 months.
    Problem is, guys like you (and me) are a large part of the current problems with load shedding. No sun, cloudy, cold.. We REALLY increase the demand during the day.

  • Steve Gavin says:

    Going full on solar was the best money I have spent in years. Installed the original system just over a year ago and doubled up on battery capacity 4 months later. The pay back was never part of my decision, comfort and stress free living was. My view a year ago was that the load shedding was going to get a lot worse and might never be normal again in my lifetime. Life is too short to drink crap wine and too short to sit in the dark.

  • Klaus Wiswedel says:

    I have gone step by step off grid over the last 15 years. The best decision I ever made. The feel good factor is for free like the sunlight.
    Its a pleasure to switch all lights on whilst my neighbours are sitting in the dark during the ever increasing load shedding.
    It may sound expensive to start with but if you consider the total value of your house then its a very small percentage

  • Johan Buys says:

    Most councils charge an availability fee whether you are using them or not.

    So best strategy is a small grid connection and lots of solar and battery. Downsizing to the minimum council connection actually helps you : you need twice as big a solar and battery system to cater for the worst ten days of sunshine. With council only connected to a battery charger, you can get a significantly smaller solar setup and your batteries will last a lot longer.

  • Cape Flats says:

    So for those who are totally off-grid, do you still pay the network charges, demand-side management charges, and service charge?
    In my Joburg house, actual utility usage and rates amounts to around 45% of my monthly bill and the rest are network charges and VAT (effectively, taxes).

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