Federal regulatory analysis

Of seven things, exactly one is the blocker.

Every part of a plug-in solar system has a regulatory status in Canada. Six are settled or out of federal scope. One is the actual blocker — and it's not the panel, the inverter, or the plug.

Photo: David Whelan / CC0 1.0

Where each part stands

Click any part of the diagram below to see its regulatory status and the standards in play. Two adjacent issues — building / lease law and the utility meter — sit outside the diagram because they are outside federal scope.

Solar panelMicroinverterPlug & outletHome circuit

Click each component for technical details.

Solar panel

Settled

Crystalline-silicon PV modules are covered by Canadian product standards already in force. The same module families that go on Canadian rooftops can be used in plug-in applications without additional certification.

CSA C61215Design qualification and type approval (Canadian adoption of IEC 61215)
CSA C61730PV module safety qualification

Microinverter

Settled

Grid-tied microinverters intended for Canadian installation are certified to CSA C22.2 No. 107.1, with anti-islanding to CSA C22.3 No. 9 (the Canadian harmonization of IEEE 1547). Most major North American suppliers are dual-listed with the equivalent UL standards.

CSA C22.2 No. 107.1Power conversion equipment
CSA C22.3 No. 9DER interconnection (anti-islanding, ride-through)
IEEE 1547Interconnection of distributed energy resources

Cord and plug

Partial gap

The NEMA 5-15 plug specification itself is settled. The one safety function that benefits from updated component standards is plug de-energization — that the prongs go dead within roughly a second of disconnection. UL 3700 specifies this at the kit level; an update to CSA C22.2 No. 107.1 could specify it at the component level, in parallel with the CEC amendment, not as a prerequisite.

ANSI/NEMA WD-6Wiring devices — dimensional specifications
UL 3700 §6Plug de-energization timing

Branch circuit

Settled

The 15 A or 20 A general-purpose 120 V branch circuit in any Canadian residence is governed by CEC Section 8. A 1,200 W system draws roughly 10 A — well within the 80% continuous-load derating Section 8 prescribes for a 15 A circuit. No modification of residential branch-circuit infrastructure is required.

CEC Section 8Branch-circuit, feeder, and service calculations

The full regulatory taxonomy

Including two areas the diagram doesn't cover because they sit outside federal scope.

Settled3 components

Already covered by Canadian standards in force. Not in dispute.

  • Solar panelCSA C61215 / C61730
  • MicroinverterCSA C22.2 No. 107.1, CSA C22.3 No. 9
  • Branch circuitCEC Section 8
Partial gap1 component

A safety standard could be tightened, but it doesn't block the CEC amendment.

  • Plug de-energizationUL 3700 §6 / CSA component-level update
Out of federal scope2 areas

Not the federal regulator's question. Different fights, separate templates.

  • Building, lease, condo lawProvincial tenancy and strata legislation
  • Utility meter and gridNon-exporting, no interconnection agreement
The actual blocker

Receptacle and the Canadian Electrical Code

The Canadian Electrical Code does not currently recognize cord-and-plug PV as a category. A 1,200 W cord-connected device gets the same regulatory treatment as a 100 kW commercial array — full permitting, licensed contractor, utility interconnection agreement, bi-directional metering. Closing this is the federal ask.

Standards in play
  • CEC Section 64Renewable energy systems (Rules 64-200 to 64-222)
  • CEC Section 84Interconnection of electric power production sources
  • CSA C22.1:24Canadian Electrical Code, 26th edition

The federal regulatory ask

Primary — what unblocks Canadians

Amend the Canadian Electrical Code to recognize CSA-listed cord-and-plug photovoltaic equipment up to 1,200 W on a standard 15 A or 20 A branch circuit, when the equipment includes anti-islanding, ground-fault protection, and plug de-energization, with no requirement for utility approval, interconnection agreement, bi-directional metering, or licensed-contractor installation.

Long-term — opens the EU supply chain

A CSA-developed plug-in solar standard accepting both UL 3700 (US) and EN/IEC (EU) conformity. Useful — but not what is blocking Canadians today.

Help unlock plug-in solar

Add your name to the federal petition. The same email lands in front of the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources.