Our Expert in Kazakhstan
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Kazakhstan’s electric capacity market is undergoing its most significant structural overhaul since the market became operational in 2019, driven by a new regulatory package anchored by Minister of Energy Order No.152‑n/k of 14 April 2026 and a suite of supporting secondary rules. The reforms reshape who receives capacity payments, how availability obligations are certified, and the compliance architecture that generators, IPP developers and project lenders must follow. For energy general counsel, project financiers and utility compliance teams, the practical question is no longer what changed but what to do in the next 30, 90 and 180 days to protect revenue streams, satisfy lender covenants and avoid administrative penalties.
Kazakhstan operates three distinct wholesale power markets. The energy market compensates generators for the electricity (MWh) they actually deliver to the grid. The capacity market compensates them for maintaining available generation capacity (MW), essentially paying power plants to be ready to produce when the system needs them, regardless of whether they dispatch. A third, smaller ancillary services market covers frequency regulation, voltage support and operating reserves. As the International Energy Agency has noted, separating capacity remuneration from energy payments is central to Kazakhstan’s strategy for incentivising investment in new generation and the rehabilitation of ageing thermal assets.
Two entities sit at the centre of daily market operations. The Settlement and Financial Center (RFC) administers the capacity market itself, it runs capacity auctions, manages participant registration, calculates payment obligations, and settles monthly capacity invoices between buyers and sellers. KEGOC, the national system operator, manages the physical transmission grid, issues dispatch instructions, certifies technical availability, and publishes the data that RFC uses to verify whether generators have met their availability obligations. Understanding this division of responsibility is essential because the 2026 reforms impose new filing and certification duties at both institutions.
Order No.152‑n/k, signed on 14 April 2026, together with related secondary rules, introduces changes across four pillars: eligibility and registration, payment mechanics, operational obligations, and enforcement. The table below summarises the core instruments and their practical impact.
| Date | Instrument / Event | Practical Impact (Who Must Act) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2019 | Capacity market operational start | Baseline, original eligibility, payment and settlement rules established |
| 14 April 2026 | Minister of Energy Order No.152‑n/k | Revised capacity‑market rules: new eligibility tests, tightened availability thresholds, updated payment formula, generators, IPPs, lenders must review all existing arrangements |
| Q2–Q3 2026 | RFC secondary implementation notices and updated auction rules | New registration documentation, revised auction participation procedures, developers and utilities must file updated eligibility packages |
| Q3 2026 (expected) | First major RFC capacity auction conducted under 2026 rules | Generators must qualify under new criteria; lenders should update financial models to reflect revised payment ceilings |
| H2 2026 onward | KEGOC updated metering and technical certification protocols | All capacity market participants must install or upgrade smart metering and complete re‑certification |
Under the pre‑2026 regime, capacity payments flowed from electricity buyers (regional energy companies, large industrial consumers and single‑buyer entities) through RFC to qualifying generators, based primarily on installed capacity and historical availability data. The 2026 reforms introduce three material changes to this flow. First, the payment formula now weights demonstrated real‑time availability more heavily than nameplate or installed capacity, meaning generators that cannot prove hour‑by‑hour readiness face reduced payments. Second, settlement periods move from quarterly reconciliation to monthly settlement with intra‑month provisional payments, tightening cash‑flow cycles for both payers and recipients.
Third, a new price ceiling mechanism links maximum capacity tariffs to an index that factors in capital expenditure benchmarks published by the Ministry of Energy, replacing the previous administratively set caps.
Under the revised rules, three categories of participant are eligible for capacity payments in Kazakhstan:
Renewable energy generators operating under feed‑in tariff or auction‑based PPA schemes remain outside the capacity market and continue to receive remuneration through their separate contractual frameworks. Industry observers expect, however, that the government may revisit this exclusion as wind and solar capacity grows and grid‑balancing requirements intensify.
Capacity payments are triggered when a registered generator maintains certified availability above the minimum threshold set by RFC for the relevant settlement period. The calculation method under the 2026 rules combines the generator’s certified available capacity (in MW), the applicable capacity tariff (in KZT/MW/month, subject to the price ceiling), and a performance adjustment factor that penalises shortfalls against the contracted availability percentage. The price ceiling itself is recalculated annually by the Ministry of Energy using a formula that incorporates a capital cost index, a weighted average cost of capital benchmark, and an efficiency adjustment. This represents a significant departure from the previous static tariff caps and requires generators and their financial advisers to model a wider range of revenue scenarios.
The first priority is to map the new rules onto existing contractual and financial arrangements. Generators should update financial models to reflect the revised payment formula, monthly settlement cadence and new price ceiling methodology. In parallel, project companies must review every existing PPA and off‑take agreement to identify clauses that reference capacity payment entitlements, availability definitions or settlement mechanics, any of these may now be misaligned with the 2026 framework. Where a financing agreement contains material adverse change, regulatory change or revenue waterfall provisions, the project company should issue a preliminary notice to its lender group flagging the regulatory change and its potential impact on debt service coverage ratios.
Finally, internal teams should begin assembling the documentation required for RFC re‑registration and KEGOC technical re‑certification.
Once the initial mapping exercise is complete, the focus shifts to negotiation and preparation. PPA amendment discussions with off‑takers should address the allocation of capacity revenues and any pass‑through mechanisms affected by the new payment formula. Generators must commission an independent technical audit of their metering systems to confirm compliance with the updated KEGOC smart metering standards. For generators intending to participate in the Q3 2026 RFC auction, the eligibility documentation package, including updated availability data, technical certifications and financial standing evidence, must be compiled and submitted within the RFC‑specified pre‑qualification window.
The medium‑term window is for completing formal contract amendments, executing supplemental financing agreements that reflect revised covenant packages, and submitting all outstanding regulatory filings to RFC and KEGOC. Generators should also use this period to embed the new compliance obligations into internal operating procedures and staff training programmes, ensuring that availability reporting and metering data flows are consistently maintained.
| Action | Responsible Party | Deadline | Evidence to Retain |
|---|---|---|---|
| Update financial model for new payment formula | CFO / Financial adviser | Within 30 days | Updated model with sensitivity analysis |
| Review PPA capacity payment clauses | General counsel / External counsel | Within 30 days | Clause‑by‑clause gap analysis memorandum |
| Issue preliminary lender notification | Project company / Company secretary | Within 30 days | Copy of notice and lender acknowledgement |
| Commission metering system audit | Technical director / O&M contractor | 30–60 days | Independent audit report |
| Submit RFC auction pre‑qualification package | Regulatory affairs / External counsel | Per RFC auction timetable (expected Q3 2026) | RFC confirmation of receipt and qualification status |
| Execute PPA amendments | General counsel / Counterparty | 90–180 days | Signed amendment agreement |
| Complete KEGOC technical re‑certification | Technical director | Per KEGOC notice (H2 2026 onward) | KEGOC certificate of compliance |
The central drafting challenge is determining how capacity payments received by the generator from RFC are treated within the PPA revenue structure. Under many existing PPAs in Kazakhstan, capacity payments are either bundled into a single tariff or allocated through a generic “other revenue” clause that does not contemplate the 2026 framework. PPA amendments should now include a distinct capacity revenue allocation clause that specifies whether capacity payments are retained by the generator, passed through to the off‑taker as a tariff reduction, or shared on a defined ratio. Where the PPA is structured as a tolling agreement, the amendment must clarify whether the toller or the generator bears the risk of capacity payment shortfalls caused by availability failures.
The 2026 rules impose stricter availability thresholds that directly affect PPA performance metrics. Existing contractual definitions of “available capacity,” “deemed availability” and “scheduled maintenance” should be reviewed against the RFC and KEGOC definitions to avoid situations where a generator meets its PPA obligations but fails the regulatory test, or vice versa. Force majeure clauses require particular attention: the 2026 framework treats certain events (such as fuel supply disruption not attributable to force majeure under the grid code) differently from typical PPA force majeure definitions. Aligning contractual and regulatory definitions reduces the risk of a generator being penalised twice, once commercially under the PPA, and again administratively by RFC.
PPA amendments should impose a positive obligation on the generator to maintain metering systems compliant with the current KEGOC technical standards and to provide the off‑taker (and, where relevant, the lender’s technical adviser) with copies of all RFC and KEGOC filings related to capacity availability. This transparency mechanism protects off‑takers and lenders from discovering compliance failures only after a payment shortfall materialises.
The following illustrative clause structures address the most common amendment requirements. These are provided for discussion purposes and must be adapted to each transaction’s specific terms.
Under the updated rules, capacity auctions administered by RFC follow a sealed‑bid, pay‑as‑cleared format. Generators wishing to participate must submit a pre‑qualification package that includes evidence of a valid generation licence, certified available capacity data from KEGOC, audited financial statements, and a declaration of compliance with metering and reporting obligations. The RFC publishes the auction calendar and specific documentation requirements on its capacity market portal. Generators that fail to pre‑qualify may not participate, and any capacity already subject to a long‑term agreement must be declared and ringfenced from the auction volume.
KEGOC’s role expands under the 2026 package. The system operator now conducts real‑time availability verification using telemetry data from generators’ SCADA systems. This data feeds directly into the RFC settlement engine. Generators must ensure uninterrupted telemetry connectivity, because gaps in data transmission may be treated as periods of unavailability, directly reducing capacity payments. Day‑ahead dispatch instructions issued by KEGOC must also be reconciled against RFC capacity obligations, and any discrepancy requires immediate written notification to both bodies.
All capacity market participants are required to install or upgrade to smart metering systems conforming to the KEGOC technical specification. This includes interval metering capable of recording generation output and availability status at intervals of no greater than 15 minutes, with automated data transmission to KEGOC’s central monitoring platform. Non‑compliant metering systems must be replaced or upgraded within the timeframe specified in the KEGOC implementation notice.
| Filing / Obligation | Responsible Entity | Timeline | Consequence of Non‑Compliance |
|---|---|---|---|
| RFC capacity market registration (new or updated) | Generator / project company | Prior to first auction participation or within 60 days of Order No.152‑n/k | Ineligibility for capacity payments |
| KEGOC technical re‑certification | Generator (technical director) | Per KEGOC notice (H2 2026 onward) | Suspension of certified available capacity status |
| Smart metering upgrade / installation | Generator (O&M contractor) | Per KEGOC implementation schedule | Data gaps treated as unavailability, reduced payments |
| Monthly availability data submission to RFC | Generator | Monthly (per RFC settlement calendar) | Payment withholding until data submitted and verified |
Project financiers face three principal risks arising from the capacity market reform in Kazakhstan. Payment flow risk stems from the shift to a performance‑weighted, monthly settlement model, a generator that falls below the availability threshold even temporarily may experience material revenue volatility. Eligibility delisting risk arises if the borrower fails to maintain its RFC registration or KEGOC certification, which would extinguish capacity revenue entirely. Technical availability risk is amplified by the new requirement for real‑time SCADA telemetry; any metering or connectivity failure may be treated as unavailability, regardless of the plant’s actual physical readiness to generate.
Financing documents should be updated to address these risks directly. Industry observers expect that lenders active in Kazakhstan’s power sector will seek provisions in four areas:
Before committing new capital or consenting to a borrower’s participation in the revised capacity market, lenders should independently verify RFC registration status, review the borrower’s metering audit report, obtain a legal opinion confirming the enforceability of the capacity supply agreement under Kazakh law, and stress‑test the financial model under low‑availability and price‑ceiling scenarios reflecting the 2026 payment formula.
| Reporting Obligation | Generator | Utility / Off‑Taker | Lender |
|---|---|---|---|
| RFC registration and annual renewal | Primary obligation | Monitor compliance of contracted generator | Verify via compliance certificate |
| Monthly availability data submission | Submit to RFC and provide copy to off‑taker | Reconcile against PPA availability obligations | Review as part of quarterly compliance reporting |
| KEGOC metering certification | Obtain and maintain certification | Confirm generator compliance as condition of PPA | Include as condition precedent to disbursement |
| Capacity payment reconciliation | Prepare and submit to RFC | Verify pass‑through amounts under PPA | Monitor against debt service coverage ratio triggers |
The 2026 regulatory package introduces a graduated penalty framework administered by RFC and, for technical violations, by KEGOC. Generators that fail to register or re‑register with RFC within the prescribed timeframe face suspension from capacity payment eligibility. Persistent metering non‑compliance or failure to maintain telemetry connectivity may result in mandatory capacity payment deductions calculated as a percentage of the generator’s monthly entitlement. In serious cases, such as submission of falsified availability data, the Ministry of Energy retains authority to revoke the generation licence itself.
Given the heightened enforcement environment, PPA dispute resolution clauses should be reviewed to ensure they cover disputes arising from regulatory penalties and their downstream commercial effects. A well‑drafted clause should provide for expert determination on technical matters (such as metering accuracy or availability calculation disputes) and arbitration under the rules of the Kazakhstan International Arbitration Centre (or another agreed institution) for commercial disputes. Termination provisions should distinguish between termination triggered by regulatory non‑compliance (which may give the off‑taker or lender step‑in rights before termination) and termination triggered by a regulatory change that renders performance economically impracticable (which should engage the regulatory change risk allocation clause discussed above).
The capacity market reform in Kazakhstan is not a single‑event change but a rolling implementation programme. The following roadmap summarises the practical timeline for legal, financial and technical teams:
Counsel advising on projects in Kazakhstan’s electric capacity market should treat this as an iterative compliance exercise, revisiting each workstream as RFC and KEGOC publish additional implementation guidance throughout 2026 and into 2027.
The following redline excerpts illustrate common amendments required to bring existing PPAs and financing documents into alignment with the 2026 capacity market rules. All language below is provided for discussion purposes only and must be reviewed and adapted by qualified Kazakh‑law counsel for each specific transaction.
Generators, developers and lenders operating within the electric capacity market in Kazakhstan should treat the 2026 reforms as an ongoing compliance programme rather than a one‑time adjustment. The regulatory architecture continues to evolve, and maintaining close engagement with RFC, KEGOC and the Ministry of Energy, while keeping contractual and financing documentation current, is the single most effective risk‑mitigation strategy available to market participants.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Madiyar Bekturganov at Zan Hub LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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