Electricity service providers have confirmed that prepaid meters must be upgraded by 24 November.
A deadline related to the token identifier rollover was extended to 31 March, but this does not apply to the meters used by prepaid customers.
The South African Local Government Association’s (Salga) extension was aimed at municipalities, allowing them to continue generating KRN1 codes that can be converted to KRN2 codes.
KRN stands for Key Revision Number which is a number that identifies a vending key within a supply group.
The upgrading of the meters and the software used is similar to that of a mobile phone update, states City Power.
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The upgrade comes with a host of features that “facilitate better monitoring and management of electricity usage.”
“The conversion from KRN1 to KRN2 is crucial for several reasons, including making sure that customers move away from old conventional meters to smart or semi-smart meters,” confirmed City Power spokesperson Isaac Mangena.
In the case of tampering, upgraded meters will send a signal to operators, allowing authorities to act against any potential criminality.
“The meter coding upgrade also positions our infrastructure to support future technological advancements and innovations in energy management,” added Mangena.
Eskom and City Power have urged customers to ensure their meters are ready to receive KRN2 units after 24 November.
Units loaded before 24 November will be carried over, by no new units can be loaded if the meter has not received the update.
For City Power customers to verify if their meters are ready for the rollover, they can follow any of these three steps:
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Eskom customers can follow these DIY steps to verify their meters:
The deadline extension relates to the key change tokens which are dispensed to upgrade the software of the meters.
“[The extension] will allow municipalities to generate key change tokens for meters that would still be on KRN1 after November 2024 and get them converted to KRN2,” Salga’s Dr Silas Mulaudzi told The Citizen.
Their 1,993 base-date vending keys that will expire on 24 November. No further token identifier rollover key change tokens can be generated thereafter.
“The Standard Transfer Specification Association has developed a technical solution to extend the validity period of these 1993 base date vending keys by six months,” explained Mulaudi.
“Municipalities should pre-generate key change tokens for all known meters before the cut-off date and deal with the outstanding meters on a case-by-case basis using the vending key extension,” he concluded.
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