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Beyond the panels

Why EPC selection is the most critical decision in South Africa’s energy transition

As SA’s renewable energy market expands and matures, more companies are turning to private energy infrastructure. Commercial solar installations, hybrid systems and off-grid solutions are becoming part of core business strategy in all sectors.

But while the technology behind renewable energy has matured significantly, the decision of who builds that infrastructure has become just as important as the decision to invest in it. For companies planning energy projects that may operate for 20 years or more, selecting the right engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) partner is emerging as one of the most consequential decisions in the entire process.

Poor engineering choices, inexperienced contractors or weak operational support can undermine system performance, introduce safety risks and erode the financial case for renewable investment. As the market grows and new entrants emerge, business leaders are increasingly asking the same question: how do you distinguish a credible EPC partner from a risky one?

Why EPC selection matters now

South Africa’s commercial and industrial renewable energy market has grown rapidly in recent years, driven by electricity supply instability, rising tariffs and regulatory changes that have opened the door to private generation. As a result, companies that once relied exclusively on a single national supplier are now entering long-term infrastructure partnerships with private energy providers. That shift fundamentally changes the decision-making process.

“In the past, businesses effectively had one electricity supplier,” explains Claude Peters, Managing Director at RenEnergy. “Now that companies have the opportunity to choose a partner for their energy infrastructure, the decision shouldn’t be driven by cost alone. There are many other factors that matter first.”

Unlike short-term operational purchases, energy infrastructure projects operate on multi-decade timelines. A poorly designed or poorly maintained system may continue to operate for years  but at significantly lower performance levels.

“You can install two solar systems of exactly the same size next to each other,” Peters says. “But if one is engineered better, it could produce five to 10% more energy every year. Over 20 years, that difference becomes enormous.”

In other words, renewable infrastructure is not just about installing panels. It is about engineering an energy system that performs reliably over decades.

The growing risks in a rapidly expanding market

Rapid industry growth inevitably attracts new operators. While many are experienced engineering firms expanding into renewables, others enter the market with limited large-scale project experience. This creates a new set of risks for businesses investing in major energy infrastructure.

“Inexperienced operators can present themselves as capable EPC providers very quickly,” Peters notes. “But installing a few rooftop panels is very different from designing and building a complex commercial energy system.”

The consequences of poor project design can be significant.



Renewable infrastructure is not just about installing panels. It is about engineering an energy system that performs reliably over decades.

Substandard engineering can introduce electrical safety risks, compromise building infrastructure or result in systems that fail to deliver expected energy output. In extreme cases, companies may discover that the contractor responsible for installation is no longer operating when problems arise. “If something goes wrong a year later and the EPC is no longer in business, who do you call?” Peters asks. “This is a long-term asset. You need to know the partner behind it will still be there.”

Another risk is underperformance. A solar installation may be sold on the basis of projected energy production  for example, generating one million kilowatt-hours per year but poor design or inadequate maintenance could result in significantly lower output. “It might have been cheaper upfront,” Peters says, “but if the system only produces 60% of what was promised, it becomes a very expensive decision.”

For executives evaluating renewable energy projects, selecting an EPC partner requires a structured due diligence process. While the technical details may differ across industries and project types, several key evaluation criteria consistently emerge.

Lessons from industry experience

As the renewable energy sector matures, industry standards and regulatory frameworks are gradually strengthening. Compliance requirements, engineering sign-offs and installation standards now play a greater role in project evaluation.

“Industry bodies provide an important alignment function,” says Khuluse. “They help ensure that projects meet recognised standards for safety, performance and regulatory compliance, even in a rapidly evolving market.”

Financial institutions are also introducing their own due diligence processes for EPC providers involved in financed projects, reflecting the financial risks associated with underperforming infrastructure. Yet many experienced industry participants argue that regulation alone cannot guarantee quality, ultimately, responsible project development requires informed decision-making by businesses themselves.

“When companies invest in a renewable energy system, they are integrating new infrastructure into the most critical parts of their operations the electrical backbone of the facility,” Peters says. “That is not something where corners can be cut.”

Renewable infrastructure as a long-term partnership

For many organisations, renewable energy investments are among the largest infrastructure decisions they will make this decade. Panels, inverters and batteries may be the most visible components, but the long-term success of these projects depends on the engineering and operational ecosystem behind them. That is why industry experts increasingly encourage businesses to approach EPC selection not as a procurement exercise, but as the beginning of a long-term partnership.

“The real test of a partner is not when everything is working perfectly,” Peters says. “It is when something goes wrong and they are still there to solve the problem.” In a rapidly expanding renewable energy market, that distinction may ultimately determine whether an energy investment delivers its promised returns or becomes a costly lesson in infrastructure due diligence.