Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Local firm wins first step in legal battle against ‘great solar rip-off’

Date:

Solar Company Scores Legal Victory in Big Solar Fight

What’s the Fight About?

A South African solar panel maker called ARTsolar says it’s uncovered a huge problem. The company, which is the only one of its kind in Sub-Saharan Africa, claims that 18 foreign companies (or their partners) broke the rules. These companies won big government contracts to build solar power plants, but ARTsolar says they didn’t use enough locally made solar panels as they were supposed to.

The Local Content Rule

The government’s renewable energy programs have a “local content” rule. It means winning companies must use a certain percentage of parts and labor from South Africa. The goal was to boost local manufacturing, create jobs, and build industry here at home. ARTsolar argues the companies instead imported cheaper panels from overseas, skipping their promises.

The Court’s Decision

In 2024, ARTsolar went to court to force the government to act. It wanted all the documents showing how the government decided if companies followed the local rules. The government department (DMRE) didn’t want to share, calling the information confidential. But the court disagreed with them.

Balancing Confidentiality and Fairness

The judge, John Mullins, understood that some bid documents contain private business info. However, he said ARTsolar’s right to a fair legal process (protected by the Constitution) was more important right now. He explained that just because a company didn’t make a formal decision doesn’t mean there’s no record—the government’s inaction itself is part of the story.

How the Documents Will Be Handled

The judge ordered the DMRE to hand over the full record of decisions by January 30. To protect secrets, the documents will be split:

  • Non-confidential parts: Shared with all legal teams.
  • Confidential parts: Only ARTsolar’s lawyers and one independent expert can see these, after signing a strict secrecy pledge.

If the two sides can’t agree on what’s confidential, a retired judge will decide within 24 hours. Nothing will be released to the public.

Who’s Involved?

ARTsolar named 27 “respondents” in its case. This includes:

  • The Ministers of Mineral Resources & Energy, Electricity, and Finance.
  • The energy regulator’s board chair.
  • Eskom and its transmission company.
  • 18 private energy companies (IPPs): Big names like Scatec Solar, Engie Southern Africa, EDF Renewables, and Enel Green Power Africa. These were the companies that won the solar contracts.

Many of these companies argued against releasing their bid details, calling them commercially sensitive.

Why This Matters

Jobs and Local Industry

ARTsolar isn’t just fighting for itself. It says the government departments (DMRE and DTIC) failed to enforce the local rule. If foreign companies can ignore the requirement, it hurts South Africa’s chance to build its own solar manufacturing industry and keep jobs local. This case could expose if this is happening across billions of rands worth of solar projects.

What Happens Next?

The Deadline and Next Steps

The government must deliver all the documents by January 30. The court will decide on legal costs later. Getting this record is a critical first step for ARTsolar. With the documents in hand, the company can move forward with its main case to prove the IPPs broke their contracts and that the government failed to hold them accountable.

Conclusion

This ruling is a major procedural win for ARTsolar. It forces the government to open its files on how it enforced (or didn’t enforce) local content rules in massive solar tenders. While the full legal battle is still ahead, the court has made it clear that a company’s right to challenge government decisions can outweigh claims of business confidentiality. The outcome could reshape how South Africa’s renewable energy boom benefits local industry and workers.

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