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Towards a workable renewable energy framework in South Africa

This dissertation aims to determine whether a workable legal framework for renewable energy (RE) exists in South Africa by comparing the country‘s existing policy and legislative frameworks in order to highlight strengths and weaknesses, and juxtaposing this overall position against contemporary for...

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Main Author: Jooste, Dustin
Other Authors: Paterson, Alexander
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Institute of Marine and Environmental Law 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Jooste, Dustin
author2 Paterson, Alexander
author_browse Jooste, Dustin
Paterson, Alexander
author_facet Paterson, Alexander
Jooste, Dustin
author_sort Jooste, Dustin
collection Thesis
description This dissertation aims to determine whether a workable legal framework for renewable energy (RE) exists in South Africa by comparing the country‘s existing policy and legislative frameworks in order to highlight strengths and weaknesses, and juxtaposing this overall position against contemporary foreign legislation from the United States in an effort to discern relevant and viable best practices. Key issues that are considered include: the Government‘s commitment to RE and energy efficiency; environmental protection and RE as drivers for social development; job creation and sustainable economic growth; the governance of and relevant institutions in the energy sector; public participation, education and access to information in terms of RE; and, finally, the use of market-based instruments for the support of RE in South Africa. The research found that South Africa‘s legal framework is largely on par with international best practice in terms of the above issues. Rather than a lack of substantive content in the legal framework, implementation and political commitment (buy-in) appears to be inadequate. However, issues on which South Africa‘s legal framework is found to be wanting include: a lack of binding RE targets and full costing in the energy sector; the Government‘s reluctance to enter public–private partnerships despite its current lack of capacity; and an almost unfettered executive discretion in terms of RE development and deployment. This dissertation concludes that the Government has failed to take a long term view of the energy sector, choosing, instead, to accomplish interim social upliftment through short-term utilization of coal power at the expense of the environment and future generations. This points to inadequate transparency and institutional accountability in the sector. Vague legislative mandates and a seeming lack of political will and insight in South Africa necessitates a comprehensive legislative review before RE can play a part in the future development of the country.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:53:26.555Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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publisher Institute of Marine and Environmental Law
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41434 Towards a workable renewable energy framework in South Africa Jooste, Dustin Paterson, Alexander environmental law This dissertation aims to determine whether a workable legal framework for renewable energy (RE) exists in South Africa by comparing the country‘s existing policy and legislative frameworks in order to highlight strengths and weaknesses, and juxtaposing this overall position against contemporary foreign legislation from the United States in an effort to discern relevant and viable best practices. Key issues that are considered include: the Government‘s commitment to RE and energy efficiency; environmental protection and RE as drivers for social development; job creation and sustainable economic growth; the governance of and relevant institutions in the energy sector; public participation, education and access to information in terms of RE; and, finally, the use of market-based instruments for the support of RE in South Africa. The research found that South Africa‘s legal framework is largely on par with international best practice in terms of the above issues. Rather than a lack of substantive content in the legal framework, implementation and political commitment (buy-in) appears to be inadequate. However, issues on which South Africa‘s legal framework is found to be wanting include: a lack of binding RE targets and full costing in the energy sector; the Government‘s reluctance to enter public–private partnerships despite its current lack of capacity; and an almost unfettered executive discretion in terms of RE development and deployment. This dissertation concludes that the Government has failed to take a long term view of the energy sector, choosing, instead, to accomplish interim social upliftment through short-term utilization of coal power at the expense of the environment and future generations. This points to inadequate transparency and institutional accountability in the sector. Vague legislative mandates and a seeming lack of political will and insight in South Africa necessitates a comprehensive legislative review before RE can play a part in the future development of the country. 2025-05-14T07:25:46Z 2025-05-14T07:25:46Z 2010 2025-05-14T07:08:37Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41434 en eng application/pdf Institute of Marine and Environmental Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle environmental law
Jooste, Dustin
Towards a workable renewable energy framework in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Towards a workable renewable energy framework in South Africa
title_full Towards a workable renewable energy framework in South Africa
title_fullStr Towards a workable renewable energy framework in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Towards a workable renewable energy framework in South Africa
title_short Towards a workable renewable energy framework in South Africa
title_sort towards a workable renewable energy framework in south africa
topic environmental law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41434
work_keys_str_mv AT joostedustin towardsaworkablerenewableenergyframeworkinsouthafrica