Cypriot startup unveils new device to reduce solar curtailment
Summary
Cyprus-based Enerthon has developed a smart zero-export control device that prevents PV export losses from curtailment by directing generation to self-consumption. Certification is expected soon.
<p class="p1"><span class="s1">Cyprus-based Enerthon has developed a smart zero-export control device that prevents PV export losses from curtailment by directing generation to self-consumption. Certification is expected soon.</span></p><p>Cyprus-based renewable energy company Enerthon has developed a smart zero-export control device that prevents PV export losses from curtailment while protecting system owners from wasted generation.</p>
<p>Dubbed Elpida, the product is expected to secure certification in the coming months.</p>
<p>“The Elpida devices have been developed to reduce the energy losses of homes and businesses from ripple-controlled curtailment of PV systems in Cyprus,” the company told <strong>pv magazine</strong>. “It is installed at the PV system site, receives a signal from the distribution system operator, measures the load and dynamically controls the inverter to avoid export of energy.”</p>
<p>Households in Cyprus are expected to lose about €300 ($350) in 2025 because of ripple curtailment, according to the company. In those situations, the distribution system operator sends a ripple signal to inverters, ordering them to limit production to avoid grid overload. However, because self-consumption does not interfere with the grid, the new product allows it by dynamically controlling the inverter.</p>
<p>The device’s supply is 230 Vac to 270 Vac, and it can read three phases between live and neutral (L1-N, L2-N, L3-N). It works with as many as three current transformers and can run internally on 12 Vdc, 5 Vdc or 3.3 Vdc. It communicates with inverters through the RS-485 serial communication standard.</p>
<p>“We are studying other EU countries where curtailment of rooftop systems is leading to significant losses,” the company added. “Our preliminary findings show that in the United Kingdom, Germany, Spain and Portugal, the distribution system operators are implementing zero-injection modes.”</p>
<p><a href="https://www.pv-magazine.com/2025/06/10/cyprus-curtails-more-than-half-of-renewables-including-residential-solar/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Cyprus curtailed more than half of its potential renewable power in early 2025</a>, including record residential solar cuts, as grid limits and a lack of storage strain its energy transition.</p>
<p>According to CyprusGrid, an energy analytics platform focused on the country’s electricity sector, Cyprus curtailed 145,000 MWh of renewable energy between January and May 2025 – a 58% curtailment rate out of an estimated 251,000 MWh of potential clean generation.</p>
<p>In contrast, Cyprus <a href="https://www.pv-magazine.com/2025/02/14/cyprus-curtails-29-of-renewable-energy-in-2024/" rel="noopener" target="_blank">curtailed 29% of its generated renewable energy</a> in 2024, up from 13.4% in 2023 and 3.3% in 2022.</p>