
The SR500 Blueprint: How Morocco and Switzerland are Industrializing Rooftop Solar

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Morocco is stepping into a new phase of climate linked infrastructure deployment, one that blends commercial rooftop solar, bankable financing, and Paris Agreement Article 6.2 cooperation into a single, scalable framework.
At the center is Solar Rooftop 500 (SR500), a Morocco Switzerland program designed to unlock a nationwide pipeline of rooftop photovoltaic projects across the commercial, industrial, and tertiary sectors. The ambition is clear: build a distributed solar market segment at scale, while generating internationally transferable emissions reductions that support Switzerland’s climate targets.
(Sources: Fondation KliK – SR500, EcoActu)
SR500 is positioned as Morocco’s first authorized project under Article 6.2 of the Paris Agreement. Article 6.2 enables countries to cooperate through the transfer of verified emissions reductions, often referred to as internationally transferred mitigation outcomes (ITMOs) with accounting rules designed to avoid double counting.
In this structure, the rooftop solar deployed in Morocco generates emissions reductions that once measured and verified can be transferred and counted toward Switzerland’s nationally determined contribution (NDC). For Morocco, the program is framed as “additional” action beyond its unconditional climate commitments, with corresponding accounting adjustments managed by national authorities.
(Sources: Fondation KliK – SR500, Fondation KliK – Morocco)
SR500’s core deployment goal is to install 500 MW of new, grid connected rooftop PV capacity by 2030.
The design focuses on repeatable, sub-scale assets:
The intent is to move rooftop solar from “one-off projects” to a standardized pipeline hundreds of installations aggregated under one programmatic umbrella rather than negotiated as isolated deals.
(Sources: Fondation KliK – SR500, EcoActu)
SR500’s financing narrative is as important as its capacity target. Switzerland’s climate foundation Fondation KliK supports the program via ITMO purchases under the bilateral cooperation framework, with the program described as mobilizing around $500 million in total investments.
(Sources: Fondation KliK – Morocco, EcoActu)
In practical terms, the program is built to reduce common rooftop solar barriers, especially upfront capex by using carbon revenue as an incentive layer. Reporting on the program describes a carbon premium mechanism that can cover up to 25% of installation costs, improving feasibility for a broader range of companies, including SMEs.
(Source: Morocco World News)
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A key enabler of SR500 is the “program” approach: projects are aggregated and monitored under a unified system rather than treated as unrelated installations.
Africa Climate Solutions (ACS) is described as the coordinating/managing entity, overseeing implementation and a digital monitoring, reporting, and verification (MRV) system intended to ensure transparency and credible emissions accounting.
(Sources: Fondation KliK – SR500, EcoActu)
SR500 is also framed as an economic catalyst:
If realized, those savings can change the rooftop solar value proposition from “green add-on” to “competitiveness lever,” especially for power-intensive operations.
(Source: Morocco World News)
SR500 is not just a capacity plan. It is a template for how distributed energy can be scaled through:
It also fits Morocco’s wider trajectory toward renewables: national strategy targets over 52% renewable electricity capacity by 2030, and rooftop PV can complement utility-scale projects by reducing daytime grid demand and broadening participation in the transition.
(Source: Fondation KliK – SR500)
SR500 positions Morocco as a proving ground for an Article 6.2 enabled rooftop solar market, one where climate cooperation is translated into financing mechanisms that companies can actually use, and where emissions accounting is treated as infrastructure, not paperwork.
If implementation matches the design, SR500 could become a reference model for other countries seeking to industrialize distributed solar deployment while tapping international climate finance turning rooftops into a measurable, tradeable lever for decarbonization.


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