South Africa’s electricity sector has taken a major step toward modernisation. Utility Trading & Consulting Services (UtCS), a South African startup, has launched the country’s first real-time electricity trading platform, designed to help municipalities buy and sell energy directly. The launch coincides with the implementation of the Electricity Regulation Amendment Act (ERAA), which opens the grid to broader participation.
Since its initial rollout, UtCS reports over 228 gigawatt hours (GWh) of energy traded and financial breakeven within 500 days. Its mission is clear: make local energy procurement more transparent and financially viable.
Why it matters
South Africa’s long-standing energy challenges: load-shedding, unreliable service, and debt-laden municipal billing systems, have strained public trust in traditional models. UtCS offers a digital workaround: a live energy marketplace where municipalities can manage procurement on their own terms, rather than rely solely on Eskom.
Christo Nicholls, CEO of UtCS, describes the company’s approach as deeply tailored.
“UtCS has positioned itself as a unique alternative trading enabling partner. This we did by leveraging on our deep understanding of how to fuse the ever-evolving technology world of IoT with the complex and multi-layered municipal legislative domain,”
Nicholls told Disrupt Africa.
The tech behind it
UtCS’s platform applies core fintech principles to energy trading. Features include real-time data feeds, IoT-enabled usage monitoring, automated settlements, and decentralised participation. It also aligns with NERSA’s regulatory framework, ensuring integration into national systems without compromising oversight.
Several municipalities have already joined, trading energy without hidden mark-ups. The system also opens the door for future peer-to-peer trading models, where residents or businesses could eventually trade power directly.
With the ERAA reshaping South Africa’s energy sector, UtCS is positioned to play a central role in how municipalities access electricity. Cities struggling with arrears or unreliable grid supply now have a practical alternative to meet local demand.
For startups, the message is clear: meaningful innovation happens at the intersection of public infrastructure and policy reform. The future of energy in South Africa may not be top-down; it may be local, live, and built by tech.