ABSOLAR AND ABGD celebrate approval of PL 5829 in the Senate

Entities believe that the document will bring more legal security and investments to the solar sector
PL 5829 é aprovado no Senado
PL 5829 is approved in the Senate with amendments and returns to the Chamber. Photo: Senado Agency

A approval of PL 5829, with amendments, in the Federal Senate, on Wednesday night (15), was celebrated by two of the largest entities in the country's renewable energy sector: ABSOLAR (Brazilian Association of Photovoltaic Solar Energy) and ABGD (Brazilian Association of Distributed Generation).

The two associations highlighted, this Thursday (16), after analyzing the document, that the new text was approved and that it will go to a final vote in the Chamber of Deputies, should bring more legal security and investments to the Brazilian photovoltaic sector, especially for residential and commercial projects. 

Rodrigo Sauaia, CEO of ABSOLAR, said that the new document maintained the main characteristics of the proposal that had already been approved in the Chamber of Deputies, in August this year. The director also guaranteed that the amendments inserted are not the essence of the document.

“Own generation of solar energy is currently one of the best alternatives to avoid tariff flags and, thus, ease the pockets of citizens and businesspeople in this period of water scarcity,” he said. 

Bárbara Rubim, vice-president of distributed generation at ABSOLAR, highlighted that the proposal strengthens the diversity and security of the country's electricity supply. According to her, the measure should help alleviate the effects of the water crisis on the electricity sector and reduce the electricity bills of all consumers. 

“In addition to being clean and competitive, solar energy is quick to implement: a new self-generated solar system can be installed in a home or small business in a few days, bringing a reduction of up to 90% in electricity bill expenses”, commented. 

Guilherme Chrispim, president-elect of ABGD for the 2022/2023 biennium, stated that the rules set out in the new document will be a good starting point for promoting new distributed generation projects. “We are already structuring actions within the Association to take care of the qualification of the sector, such as training people and certification of professionals and companies”, he highlighted. 

PL 5829

The final text of PL 5829 maintained the current rules until 2045 for consumers who request access to the distributor up to 12 months after the publication of the Law. The document also provides for a transition period for those who enter after the grace period, with payment of the TUSD (Distribution System Usage Tariff) staggered B wire. Check out the graph below: 

Source: ABGD

Furthermore, the CNPE (National Energy Policy Council) and ANEEL (National Electric Energy Agency) will have 18 months, from the publication of the Law, to establish the guidelines and valuation of the costs and benefits of distributed generation to be implemented after the transition period. 

Currently, according to data from ABSOLAR, own solar energy generation has more than 7.9 GW of installed power in the country, which represents more than half of the capacity of the Itaipu plant. The segment has also brought to the country more than R$ 37.1 billion in investments and around R$ 9.4 billion in revenue accumulated since 2012, spread across the five regions of Brazil. Solar technology is currently used in 99.9% of all self-generation connections in the country, easily leading the segment.

Picture of Henrique Hein
Henrique Hein
He worked at Correio Popular and Rádio Trianon. He has experience in podcast production, radio programs, interviews and reporting. Has been following the solar sector since 2020.

Deixe um comentário

Your email address will not be published. Campos obrigatórios são marcados com *

Receive the latest news

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter