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Morocco's self-generation decree: what the regulatory shift actually means

ENGIE Doubles Down on Morocco: What a €0.5B African Bet Tells Us About the Clean Energy Transition

Morocco's self-generation decree: what the regulatory shift actually means
Morocco has published one of the more consequential clean energy regulatory moves on the continent this year. The implementing decree for Law 82-21 is now in effect, formally opening the door for private individuals and companies to generate renewable electricity for their own use and sell excess power back to the grid.
That might sound unremarkable to anyone familiar with net metering frameworks elsewhere, but in Morocco's context it represents a meaningful structural change. For years, the country's renewable energy ambitions (targeting more than 52% of installed electricity capacity from renewables by 2030) were largely built around centralized, utility-scale projects. Distributed, decentralized generation remained legally murky for private actors.
Law 82-21 clears that up.
What the decree actually allows
Under the new framework, both individuals and legal entities can install renewable energy systems for self-consumption. Critically, they can inject surplus electricity into the national grid and sell up to 20% of annual production to the Office National de l'Électricité et de l'Eau Potable (ONEE).
The decree also simplifies the authorization process, particularly for low-voltage installations. Fewer administrative steps means rooftop solar projects across commercial, industrial, and residential sectors become considerably easier to move from concept to commissioning.
Where the business opportunity sits
The industrial sector stands to gain the most in the near term. Energy costs are a significant operational variable for manufacturers, logistics operators, and agribusiness in Morocco. Self-generation rights give these businesses a direct lever to reduce grid electricity price exposure and cut their carbon footprint without waiting on centralized infrastructure development.
For solar developers and EPC contractors, this opens a pipeline of distributed projects that simply didn't exist in the same way before. The administrative simplification for low-voltage systems reduces the friction that typically kills smaller deals at origination.
Investors watching Morocco's clean energy space should pay attention to what this represents structurally. The country has the solar irradiance, the political will, and now an improving regulatory framework for distributed generation. The combination of a credible 2030 target and clearer private-sector on-ramps is a reasonable basis for increased deal flow in the rooftop and commercial and industrial solar segments.
A few things worth watching
The decree sets the framework, but implementation quality will determine whether it translates into bankable projects. Grid connection processes, metering arrangements, and how ONEE administers the surplus purchase mechanism in practice are all still open questions.
Morocco's track record on large-scale renewable delivery is strong. Whether that execution capability extends to a more distributed model remains to be seen, but the regulatory direction is clear. For anyone operating or investing in the North African clean energy space, this is a development worth building into your pipeline thinking now.
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