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MESA Policy Insight | April 2026

✍️MESA Editorial Team
📅Published Date
5 min read

Malaysia has entered a new phase of renewable energy market reform.
At the beginning of 2026, the Energy Commission released a series of updates across key schemes — including CRESS, SELCO, Solar ATAP, and NEDA — signaling a clear shift toward greater market flexibility, private-sector participation, and system-level integration.

From MESA’s perspective, these updates are not isolated adjustments, but part of a broader transition:
➡️ from policy-driven deployment → to market-driven optimization

1. CRESS: From Rigid Framework to Contractual Flexibility

The revised Corporate Renewable Energy Supply Scheme (CRESS) introduces significant structural improvements:

Key Changes

  • Bilateral Energy Supply Contracts (BESC) now subject to structured review
  • Excess energy treatment becomes negotiable (no longer free to grid)
  • Two-stage power system study (PSS1 & PSS2) introduced
  • Early-stage documentation requirements relaxed (term sheets allowed)

MESA Insight

CRESS is evolving into a true corporate PPA market mechanism.

This brings three major implications:

  • Risk allocation shifts from regulator → to contract parties
  • Developers gain monetization flexibility (e.g., excess energy, green attributes)
  • Project development cycle becomes faster and more bankable

👉 This is a strong signal that Malaysia is moving toward a commercialized renewable energy trading ecosystem.

2. SELCO: Cost Rationalization & Storage Threshold Redesign

The updates to Solar for Self-Consumption (SELCO) focus on cost and technical thresholds:

Key Changes

  • Standby charge threshold revised from 1 MWp → 1 MWac
  • BESS requirement now only for systems >1 MWac
    (previously applied at just 72 kWp)

MESA Insight

This is a critical correction to deployment economics.

Previously:

  • Storage requirements at low capacity significantly increased project costs
  • Many commercial users delayed solar adoption

Now:

  • Small & mid-scale systems become more financially viable
  • Storage deployment becomes targeted rather than mandatory

👉 This change will likely accelerate C&I solar adoption, while positioning storage where it is truly needed — at higher load and grid-impact levels.

3. Solar ATAP: Replacing NEM, Opening a New Participation Model

The newly introduced Solar Accelerated Transition Action Program (ATAP) replaces the previous NEM scheme.

Key Features

  • No quota limitation (major policy shift)
  • Capacity limits:
    • Residential: 5–15 kW
    • Non-domestic: up to 100% of Maximum Demand (max 1 MWac)
  • Export compensation:
    • Residential → tariff-based credit
    • Commercial → system marginal price (SMP)

MESA Insight

Solar ATAP represents a shift from subsidy-based deployment → market-aligned compensation.

Key implications:

  • Removes deployment bottlenecks (no quota)
  • Introduces price signals linked to wholesale market dynamics
  • Encourages self-consumption optimization + grid interaction

👉 This creates a foundation for future distributed energy + flexibility markets.

4. System-Level Signal: Toward a Flexible & Storage-Ready Grid

Across all schemes, a common direction is emerging:

Policy Trend

  • More contractual freedom
  • Less administrative rigidity
  • Greater grid integration requirements
  • Increasing role of storage and flexibility

MESA Strategic View

Malaysia is gradually building three core capabilities:

  1. Corporate Renewable Market (CRESS)
  2. Distributed Energy Ecosystem (SELCO + ATAP)
  3. Grid Flexibility Mechanism (NEDA + BESS integration)

👉 These elements collectively point toward a future energy system where storage becomes essential infrastructure.

5. What This Means for the Energy Storage Sector

From a storage industry perspective, these policy updates are highly significant:

Short-term Impact

  • Reduced mandatory BESS → lower barrier but slower forced adoption
  • Improved solar economics → larger pipeline for future storage retrofits

Mid-term Impact

  • Increased distributed generation → greater need for load balancing & peak shaving
  • Market-based pricing → opportunity for energy arbitrage

Long-term Impact

  • Transition toward flexibility markets
  • Storage evolves from “optional add-on” → core grid asset

Conclusion: From Deployment to Optimization

The 2026 policy updates demonstrate a clear evolution:

Malaysia is no longer focused solely on installing renewable capacity —
it is now building a functioning, flexible, and investable energy market.

For industry players, the key takeaway is:

  • Solar is becoming more accessible
  • Contracts are becoming more flexible
  • Markets are becoming more dynamic
  • And storage is becoming inevitable

About MESA

The Malaysia Energy Storage Association (MESA) is committed to supporting policy dialogue, industry alignment, and ecosystem development across Southeast Asia’s energy transition.

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About MESA

Malaysia Energy Storage Association

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