🇦🇪 United Arab Emirates Regulatory Guide 10 min read

SEWA Solar Guide Sharjah 2026

SEWA Sharjah solar guide: current status of net metering regulation, what's available now, Federal Decree-Law 17/2022 obligations, equipment standards.

Rainer Neumann

Written by

Rainer Neumann

Content Head · SurgePV

Keyur Rakholiya

Reviewed by

Keyur Rakholiya

CEO & Co-Founder · SurgePV

Published ·Last reviewed ·Regulator: Sharjah Electricity, Water and Gas Authority (SEWA)

Sharjah’s general residential and commercial net metering program is not yet publicly available. As of early 2026, SEWA had been developing the legislation and regulations for grid-connected solar installations in Sharjah — and a general customer application portal had not been publicly launched. What IS available: an operational net metering pilot within Sharjah Sustainable City for those 280 villas, off-grid solar for any Sharjah customer immediately, and a clear federal legal mandate under Decree-Law No. 17 of 2022 that requires SEWA to enable distributed connections for all customers. This guide covers the honest status, what you can do now, and how to prepare so your project is ready to move the moment SEWA opens its program.

Program Status
General net metering program in development as of early 2026 — contact SEWA to confirm current status
Federal Mandate
Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2022 (Distributed Renewable Energy) — requires SEWA to enable customer connections
Live Pilot
Sharjah Sustainable City — 280 villas with bidirectional meters (not available to general customers)
Off-Grid Solar
Available immediately — no SEWA approval required for systems with no grid connection point
Equipment Standard
IEC 61215, IEC 61730, IEC 62109-1/-2, IEC 62116, ECAS certification (UAE)
Application Route
Contact SEWA directly — sewa.gov.ae or customer service centre
Last Updated
April 2026

Federal Law Creates the Mandate — The Program Is Coming

Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2022 is a binding obligation on SEWA. Sharjah customers are legally entitled to grid-connected distributed solar connections. The question is not whether SEWA will enable the program, but when. Solar projects designed and specified now — using correct IEC-compliant equipment — will be ready to connect the moment SEWA’s program is live. This guide explains how to use the preparation period productively.

What’s Available in Sharjah for Solar in 2026

OptionAvailable Now?Details
Off-grid solar (panels + battery, no grid tie)YesNo SEWA approval required; suitable for backup power or energy independence
Sharjah Sustainable City net meteringYes (residents only)280-villa pilot development; not available to general Sharjah customers
General residential net meteringIn developmentSEWA program not yet publicly launched as of early 2026; contact SEWA for current status
Commercial behind-the-meter solarCase-by-caseDevelopers have offered behind-the-meter arrangements in Sharjah; requires direct SEWA approval
Sharjah Free Zone solar (SAIF, SHAMS, Hamriyah)Case-by-caseCheck with free zone authority and SEWA under Federal Decree-Law 17/2022

The most practical path for most Sharjah customers in 2026 is to either install off-grid solar now, or prepare all documentation and equipment to apply the moment SEWA’s general program launches. Using solar design software that models UAE irradiance and Sharjah-specific tariff inputs helps build the financial case while you wait.

Sharjah Sustainable City: The Live Pilot

The only confirmed net metering arrangement in Sharjah operates within Sharjah Sustainable City — a purpose-built master development delivered through a Shurooq and Arada partnership. Phase one of the development handed over 280 villas to residents in July 2022.

SEWA collaborated directly with the development to install bidirectional meters for participating villas. The net metering model mirrors the Shams Dubai approach used by DEWA: exported kilowatt-hours are credited at the retail tariff rate, with the net position settled at billing time. Each villa’s rooftop solar system is part of the development’s original infrastructure design, not a retrofit application.

Why this pilot does not extend to general Sharjah customers:

The Sharjah Sustainable City arrangement was built into the development’s infrastructure from the ground up. SEWA’s collaboration with Shurooq/Arada was at the developer level, not through an open application program. Existing residential or commercial customers in Sharjah cannot apply to join this pilot — it applies only to Sharjah Sustainable City premises that were delivered with the solar and metering infrastructure already installed.

What the pilot does demonstrate is that SEWA has the technical capability to operate bidirectional metering and net metering billing. The Sharjah Sustainable City pilot is, in effect, proof of concept for a broader SEWA program. The regulatory framework to scale that capability to general customers was the outstanding piece as of early 2026.

Federal Mandate: Why a SEWA Solar Program Is Coming

Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2022

Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2022 on the Regulation of the Distributed Renewable Energy Sector is the UAE’s primary legislative instrument governing customer-owned solar and renewable energy systems. The law covers all seven emirates and applies to all utilities — including SEWA.

Key obligations under Decree-Law 17/2022 relevant to Sharjah customers:

  • SEWA must enable distributed connections: The law requires the competent authority in each emirate (SEWA in Sharjah) to allow customers to connect distributed renewable energy systems to the grid.
  • Prior approval is mandatory: Customers must obtain written approval from SEWA before energising any grid-connected system. Operating without approval is a regulatory violation regardless of system size.
  • Connection agreement required: Once approved, a formal connection agreement between the customer and SEWA must be signed before the system is energised.
  • Anti-islanding protection is a federal requirement: Any grid-tied system must include automatic disconnection protection that meets the required performance criteria.

The legal framework is in place. The internal SEWA regulations and application procedures that translate the federal law into a customer-facing process were still being finalised as of early 2026. When SEWA releases its program, the Decree-Law 17/2022 structure will define its basic architecture.

SEWA’s Utility-Scale Solar Program

Separate from the distributed customer program, SEWA has been active in utility-scale renewable energy. In October 2023, SEWA signed an agreement with Masdar and Emerge for the SANA 60 MW solar plant, which became operational in June 2025. SEWA also announced a 120 MW landfill-to-solar project with BEEAH and Masdar at COP28 in December 2023.

These are grid-supply projects — they reduce SEWA’s generation costs and carbon footprint, but they do not provide net metering capability to individual customers. They do confirm SEWA’s institutional commitment to solar and renewable energy, which supports the expectation that the distributed customer program will follow.

”Developing Legislation” — What It Means Practically

When SEWA stated in March 2023 that it was “still developing legislation and regulations regulating the activation of solar panels projects in Sharjah,” this referred to the internal regulatory instruments — technical standards, application procedures, contractor qualification requirements, metering rules — needed to run a customer-facing program. The federal law exists; the emirate-level implementation had not been finalised.

The practical implication for customers is that there is no application form to submit yet for the general program, no published contractor list, and no confirmed system size limits. Contacting SEWA directly — and referencing Decree-Law 17/2022 — is the right approach to find out where the program stands at the time of your inquiry.

SEWA Electricity Tariff Rates

SEWA’s electricity tariff follows the same tiered structure as DEWA in Dubai. The tariff applies to commercial customers across Sharjah city and SEWA’s service territory. For financial modelling of a SEWA solar project, these rates represent the value of displaced grid electricity.

Commercial Tariff (2025)

Consumption TierEnergy Rate (AED/kWh)Fuel Surcharge (AED/kWh)Total (AED/kWh)
Tier 1 (lowest)0.230.060.29
Mid-tier0.300.060.36
Top tier0.380.060.44

For financial modelling, the relevant figure is the all-in rate that solar displaces: AED 0.29–0.44/kWh depending on consumption level. High-consumption commercial customers at the top tier have the strongest financial case for solar — every unit of daytime generation avoided from the grid saves AED 0.44.

Pro Tip: Use the Top-Tier Rate for Commercial Payback Estimates

Most Sharjah commercial buildings operating HVAC, lighting, and equipment during peak daytime hours will be consuming at or near the top tariff tier during those hours. Using AED 0.44/kWh as the displaced electricity value in your initial payback calculation gives the most accurate representation of the commercial case for solar. A well-positioned rooftop array displacing 80–120 kWh/day on a mid-sized commercial building represents AED 35–53/day in avoided energy cost at top-tier rates.

How to Prepare for SEWA Solar Connection

The following steps allow you to make productive use of the period before SEWA’s general program launches. A project that completes these steps can move from SEWA program launch to application submission within days rather than weeks.

1
Contact SEWA to check current program status

The first step for any Sharjah solar project is to contact SEWA directly. Visit sewa.gov.ae or a SEWA customer service centre to ask specifically about the current status of grid-connected solar applications and the availability of their net metering or distributed generation program. Reference Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2022 in your inquiry. Get any response in writing. The program status may have changed since this guide was published.

2
Prepare your site documentation in advance

While waiting for the SEWA program, prepare your project documentation now. Compile: building ownership or landlord consent documents, a site plan showing roof area and orientation, preliminary system sizing (kWp), utility account details (SEWA account number, current monthly consumption in kWh), and building NOC from the Sharjah Municipality Urban Planning Department. Having this ready reduces the time from program launch to approval.

3
Select equipment that meets UAE-wide IEC standards

Order only panels and inverters that comply with IEC 61215, IEC 61730, IEC 62109-1/-2, and IEC 62116. Verify that the equipment holds ECAS (Emirates Conformity Assessment Scheme) certification. Using DEWA-approved equipment is a reasonable proxy — SEWA is expected to require comparable standards. Keep test certificates and datasheets for all components.

4
Consider a DEWA-certified contractor familiar with Sharjah projects

Until SEWA publishes its own approved contractor list, consider engaging a contractor already certified by DEWA (Shams Dubai) who has experience in the Sharjah market. DEWA certification demonstrates familiarity with UAE solar application processes. When SEWA’s program launches, the contractor’s credentials and experience will support a faster approval. See the DEWA Shams Dubai guide for the full DEWA process as a reference for what SEWA is likely to require.

5
Evaluate off-grid as an interim option

If your business case requires solar generation now — for backup, load-shedding protection, or cost reduction — an off-grid system with battery storage (no SEWA grid connection) is available immediately without regulatory approval. Size the system to cover your critical loads. This does not prevent you from connecting to the grid once SEWA’s net metering program is live — the off-grid system can be modified or supplemented at that point.

Design and Model Your Sharjah Solar Project Now

Use SurgePV to size your system, model UAE irradiance, and calculate payback against SEWA tariff rates — so your project is fully specified and ready to submit the moment SEWA’s program launches.

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Equipment Standards to Prepare For

When SEWA launches its grid-connected solar program, the equipment requirements will align with the UAE-wide standards applied by DEWA and other emirates under Federal Decree-Law 17/2022. Specifying to these standards now means no rework when the program opens.

StandardApplies ToWhat It Covers
IEC 61215Solar panelsDesign qualification and type approval for crystalline silicon and thin-film panels
IEC 61730Solar panelsSafety qualification — mechanical, electrical, and fire safety
IEC 62109-1InvertersSafety of power converters for use in photovoltaic power systems — general requirements
IEC 62109-2InvertersSafety of power converters — additional requirements for inverters
IEC 62116InvertersAnti-islanding — test procedure for utility-interactive inverters
IEC 61727Grid interfaceCharacteristics of the utility interface for photovoltaic systems
ECASAll electrical equipmentEmirates Conformity Assessment Scheme via UAE Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology (MoIAT)

ECAS Certification

ECAS is the UAE’s mandatory product certification scheme for electrical and electronic equipment. Any solar panel, inverter, or other electrical component installed in a UAE grid-connected system must hold valid ECAS certification. ECAS certification is applied for through MoIAT and is linked to specific model numbers — verify that the exact model you plan to install holds current ECAS certification before ordering.

Anti-Islanding: The Critical Safety Function

IEC 62116 requires that grid-connected inverters automatically disconnect from the grid within the required time window when the utility supply is lost. In Sharjah, this means the inverter must detect loss of the SEWA supply and disconnect before SEWA maintenance teams could be exposed to back-fed voltage on a line they believe to be de-energised. Modern string and microinverters include this function as a built-in standard feature. Verify the anti-islanding function is correctly configured and test it during commissioning — do not rely on factory defaults without verification.

DEWA Approval Is Not the Same as SEWA Approval

Equipment on DEWA’s approved product list meets DEWA’s technical requirements. This is a reasonable proxy for what SEWA will require — both utilities draw on the same UAE IEC standards — but DEWA approval does not automatically constitute SEWA approval. When SEWA publishes its own product list or approval process, verify your selected equipment against that list. In the interim, specifying DEWA-listed equipment with full IEC compliance and ECAS certification is the safest approach.

Off-Grid Solar in Sharjah: The Immediate Option

For Sharjah customers who need solar generation now, an off-grid system is available without any SEWA involvement. The defining characteristic of an off-grid system is that there is no physical connection point to the SEWA distribution network. The system operates entirely on its own island: panels generate DC electricity, the inverter/charger converts it to AC for building loads, and a battery bank stores surplus for use when generation is below demand.

What Off-Grid Is Good For

Use CaseWhy Off-Grid Fits
Backup power (data centres, hospitals, clinics)Battery bank maintains supply during SEWA outages; no grid tie-in needed
Remote or temporary premises (construction sites, farms)No grid connection available; solar + battery is the only practical option
Commercial buildings wanting energy cost reduction nowBehind-the-meter generation displaces SEWA import during business hours
Customers wanting energy independence during the program waitFully operational now; battery storage handles overnight load

System Architecture

A standalone off-grid system for a Sharjah commercial building typically includes:

  • Rooftop solar array — sized to cover peak daytime load plus battery charging
  • Hybrid inverter/charger — converts DC from panels, manages battery charging/discharging, and powers AC loads
  • Battery bank — lithium iron phosphate (LFP) preferred for UAE ambient temperatures and cycle life
  • Monitoring system — tracks generation, consumption, battery state of charge, and performance over time

Pro Tip: Design the Off-Grid System to Be Grid-Tie Ready

When designing an off-grid system for a Sharjah commercial customer, select a hybrid inverter that supports both off-grid and grid-tied operation. When SEWA’s net metering program launches, the inverter can be reconfigured to grid-tied mode and a connection agreement signed — without replacing the hardware. The incremental cost of a grid-tie-capable hybrid inverter over a basic off-grid unit is small compared to the flexibility it provides. Use solar design software to model both the off-grid and eventual grid-tied scenario in a single project file.

Off-Grid Does Not Require SEWA Approval

An off-grid system with no physical connection point to the SEWA grid does not require any SEWA notification, application, or approval. The system operates entirely within the customer’s electrical installation. Building permits from Sharjah Municipality may still be required for the physical installation work — check with the Urban Planning Department for the applicable permit type.

Sharjah-Specific Considerations

Sharjah and Dubai Border Areas

Sharjah shares a border with Dubai across multiple areas. Some commercial premises that have a Sharjah address or are located in what feels like the Sharjah side of the border may have their electricity supply provided by DEWA rather than SEWA — especially in areas such as Mirdif, Muhaisnah, and parts of Al Qusais. If your premises are in a border zone, verify which utility provides your electricity supply before engaging a SEWA-focused compliance process. Check your electricity bill for the supplying authority. If the account is with DEWA, the DEWA Shams Dubai guide applies to your project instead.

Sharjah Free Zones

Sharjah has three primary free zones: SAIF Zone (Sharjah Airport International Free Zone), SHAMS (Sharjah Media City), and Hamriyah Free Zone. Industrial and commercial premises within free zones sit under a layer of free zone authority governance in addition to SEWA’s utility role. For solar installations in free zones, contact both the relevant free zone authority and SEWA to determine the applicable approval process under Federal Decree-Law 17/2022. The federal mandate applies to free zone premises through the same mechanism as standard commercial premises.

Sharjah’s Development Environment

Sharjah operates under a more conservative development framework than Dubai. Building modifications — including rooftop solar installations — typically require a NOC from the Sharjah Urban Planning Department. Obtain the NOC from the municipality before proceeding with any installation, even for off-grid systems, to avoid construction compliance issues unrelated to the SEWA program.

For a complete view of UAE-wide solar compliance obligations, see the UAE solar compliance hub.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need SEWA permission to install off-grid solar in Sharjah? No. A solar system with no physical connection to the SEWA grid does not require SEWA approval. However, you will likely need a building permit from Sharjah Municipality (Urban Planning Department) for the installation work. Check with the municipality for the applicable permit type before starting installation. The SEWA approval requirement only applies when a grid connection point is introduced.

Can I apply to SEWA for a grid-tied solar connection today? As of early 2026, SEWA had not publicly launched a general application portal for residential or commercial grid-tied solar. Contact SEWA directly — visit sewa.gov.ae or a SEWA customer service centre — to ask for the current program status. Reference Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2022 in your inquiry. SEWA is legally required to enable this; the program may have launched after this guide was published.

If I am in a Sharjah Free Zone, does the federal solar mandate apply to my premises? Yes. Federal Decree-Law No. 17 of 2022 applies across all UAE territories including free zones. Electricity supply within Sharjah free zones is typically still provided by SEWA. Contact SEWA and the free zone authority together to determine how the approval process applies to your specific premises — free zone authorities may have additional requirements beyond SEWA’s standard process.

What is the difference between the SEWA solar program and the Sharjah Sustainable City pilot? The Sharjah Sustainable City pilot was a developer-level arrangement between Shurooq/Arada and SEWA, built into the infrastructure of a purpose-designed master development. It is not an open program that other Sharjah customers can join. The general SEWA program — when launched — will be an application process available to any eligible residential or commercial customer with a SEWA electricity account, regardless of their development or location within SEWA’s service territory.

Should I install solar now or wait for the SEWA program? That depends on your urgency and risk tolerance. If you need energy cost reduction or backup power now, an off-grid system with battery storage delivers immediate value with no regulatory delay. If your primary goal is net metering and grid export, waiting for the SEWA program while doing preparation work (documentation, equipment specification, contractor selection) makes sense — rushing into a grid-tied installation before the program exists creates compliance risk. A hybrid approach — install off-grid now with a grid-tie-ready inverter — is often the most practical for commercial customers.

How does SEWA’s tariff compare to DEWA for solar financial modelling? SEWA’s commercial tariff structure mirrors DEWA’s: AED 0.23/kWh at the lowest tier plus AED 0.06 fuel surcharge, rising to AED 0.44/kWh total at the top tier. The financial case for commercial solar in Sharjah, at full SEWA commercial rates, is comparable to Dubai. Use solar design software to model generation against these tariff inputs for an accurate Sharjah payback estimate. See the DEWA Shams Dubai guide for a worked example of the net metering financial model that SEWA is expected to replicate.

About the Contributors

Author
Rainer Neumann
Rainer Neumann

Content Head · SurgePV

Rainer Neumann is Content Head at SurgePV and a solar PV engineer with 10+ years of experience designing commercial and utility-scale systems across Europe and MENA. He has delivered 500+ installations, tested 15+ solar design software platforms firsthand, and specialises in shading analysis, string sizing, and international electrical code compliance.

Editor
Keyur Rakholiya
Keyur Rakholiya

CEO & Co-Founder · SurgePV

Keyur Rakholiya is CEO & Co-Founder of SurgePV and Founder of Heaven Green Energy Limited, where he has delivered over 1 GW of solar projects across commercial, utility, and rooftop sectors in India. With 10+ years in the solar industry, he has managed 800+ project deliveries, evaluated 20+ solar design platforms firsthand, and led engineering teams of 50+ people.

SEWA Sharjah solar 2026Sharjah solar net meteringSEWA solar applicationsolar Sharjah UAE 2026SEWA renewable energy

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