since there is no metering of export associated with the vast majority of BS1363 sockets into which it may be plugged
The smart meter does measure export as well as import, however it registers them under two different MPAN numbers, so to be paid for export that number needs assigning to your meter, which is done remotely, so there is no reason why anyone with a smart meter is not paid for export.
With non-smart meters, there are it seems three types, one will run backwards so you get paid same for export as for import, the second simply ignores export, and the third has both import and export readings.
As to if at 800 watts you will export, well I would likely without a battery at 800 watts export half of what I would produce, this is the problem, without the battery, one will be importing on peaks and exporting in the troughts so with peaks being charged double what you get for the troughs unless you have first type of meter.
Which then asks the question, is a simple plug in solar any good? It will depend on the layout of the home, the battery pack feeding the freezer for example, a 400 watt panel will just about produce 70 watt over 24 hours in summer, so two freezers with 50% duty cycle is around 70 watt average, so a battery pack with two freezers could use the power from a 400 watt panel without any back feed into the grid. (Although it does grid tie, so it can supplement the output from the grid if solar is not enough)
What I am saying, is at 800 watt, there is really no need with a battery to have the ablity to back feed into the grid. I use around 12 kWh per day, and the 6 kW solar panels with a 5 kW inverter can produce around 32 kWh per day, on a SW facing roof. So with under 1 kW I would never need to export if I also have a battery.
But to distribute the power around the home, I would need to power parts of the house direct from the solar battery, for a owner occupier not too much of a problem, I could select some ring finals to connect to the battery, but for rental this would require extension leads to selected rooms, every home is diffrent, last house to access under the floor as run a new ring or radial final would not have been too much of a problem, with this house it would be a major problem.
So we return to
It shouldn't be DIY at the moment though? It needs installed by an electrician.
and yes with an electrician doing the work, we have many options, and in the main that is the best way to do it.
What we must remember is cost of solar on the roof is expensive due to needing scaffolding, fit solar where scaffolding is not required, and installation cost drops by a huge amount.
But, be it professional installed or DIY, we return to the same question, how to work out if the RCD is bidirectional or not. So if it means a new consumer unit to get the correct RCD then that bumps up the price, my last house had two RCDs feeding to old Wylex fuse boxes, where fuses swapped to MCBs, as RCDs fitted before we got RCDs built into the consumer unit, so there are other options other than fit a new consumer unit, and in the past we would fit a RCD double socket where we would plug in the lawn mower, i.e. a special socket for outside, and to fit a special socket for solar is not much different.
We had a requirement where a socket is likely to be used for outdoor equipment, so no RCD was required with high rise flats at the time, similar rules could be introduced for solar.
But the problem is the government announcement has short-circuited the natural progression, and promised balcony solar in months, it would likely be allowed in a few years anyway, and the industry would have caught up, just as type AC RCDs are no longer fitted, if in 2027 all RCBOs need to be bidirectional double pole switching, then plug in solar could be released for use where the CU is post 2027, or a certificate issued to say suitable.
I am sure many other ways could be found, including the EPS type of battery being permitted without upgrading CU, the problem is not really plug in solar, the problem is well publicised government announcements. We are now likely to see firms fitting solar fold, due to loss of business while waiting for the new plug and play solar.
What we want is each manufacturer to admit, these part numbers of RCD/RCBOs are not bidirectional. So at least we can look it up on a list.