Mercury (Hobart)

POWER PLAY

Energy cost cut promise

- ALEX LUTTRELL

TASMANIANS have been promised electricit­y price cuts of up to 10 per cent under a Liberal policy to pull out of the National Electricit­y Market.

Premier Will Hodgman and Energy Minister Guy Barnett have announced plans to sever ties with the NEM in a bid to achieve cheaper energy for households and businesses and ultimately re-sell power back to the national wholesale market at higher prices.

Mr Barnett said breaking the NEM link was key for Tasmania to reach the lowest prices in the nation by 2022.

“By de-linking from inflated main- land electricit­y prices in the National Electricit­y Market we can once again make our low-cost ... on-island generation work for Tasmanians,” he said.

“[We can] ensure they are no longer exposed to higher costs due to power station closures or system failures on the mainland.”

Prior to the establishm­ent of the new system in 2021, prices for regulated customers will be capped at the Consumer Price Index.

Mr Hodgman, pictured, said the change would not mean a physical disconnect­ion from the NEM with a potential second Basslink interconne­ctor still in the pipeline.

Energy costs were identified as a key issue in the Mer

cury’s recent Tassie 2022 readers’ survey — with 46.89 per cent of respondent­s saying it had a very important effect on their cost of living.

The move has been welcomed by the state’s peak welfare body with TasCOSS chief Kym Goodes saying it would ensure Tasmanians were protected from the current price shocks being experience­d nationally.

“To be fully realised, the announceme­nt will require a complex transition, careful planning and implementa­tion,” she said.

Independen­t energy analyst Marc White, of Goanna Energy said in the short term, 238,000 homes and 37,000 businesses would be protected from interstate price rises, estimated at $120 million for Tasmania in 2017-18.

“It’s good for houses and businesses over the next couple of years, but in the long term we’d still like to have seen more reform in the energy industry in Tasmania,” Mr White said.

He said Hydro Tasmania needed to be broken up into competing businesses to generate competitiv­e prices.

“The government keeps reinforcin­g the [Hydro] monopoly by continuing to intervene in [electricit­y] prices.”

Mr Barnett said when the Labor-Green government joined the NEM in 2013 it linked Tasmania’s wholesale prices with the mainland rates, which had seen volatility in prices.

Mr Barnett said a Liberal government would liaise with government business enter- prises to implement pricing mechanisms.

Labor energy spokesman Scott Bacon said the Liberals must immediatel­y release Treasury informatio­n on Tasmania being linked to the Victorian wholesale price.

“Labor supports decoupling

By de-linking from inflated mainland electricit­y prices in the National Electricit­y Market we can once again make our low-cost ... on-island generation work for Tasmanians GUY BARNETT

from the Victorian wholesale price but it has to be backed by a plan and an alternativ­e model,” he said.

“What will this mean for the business case for a second Bass Strait Interconne­ctor? Will this have implicatio­ns for investment in major wind farms in Tasmania? “What does it mean for plans to make Tasmania the battery of the nation?”

Mr White said the state was still a while away from becoming the energy “battery of the nation” through pumped hydro and wind farm techno- logy. Greens MP Rosalie Woodruff said it was important to see the impact of independen­t power prices as it moved into a political space.

The latest policy comes after the Liberals announced on Saturday that 79 Momentum Energy jobs would be re- located from Melbourne to Tasmania if they were re-elected.

State-owned Momentum Energy’s call centre operations are currently based in Melbourne despite being owned by Hydro Tasmania since 2009.

“A Government-owned business should have its call centre operations in Tasmania providing jobs for Tasmanians, and we will ensure that Momentum Energy’s 79 call centre jobs are brought home, where they belong,” said Mr Barnett.

 ?? Picture: MATT THOMPSON ?? EXIT AND BE DAMNED: Premier Will Hodgman and Energy Minister Guy Barnett at the Strathgord­on power station dam yesterday
Picture: MATT THOMPSON EXIT AND BE DAMNED: Premier Will Hodgman and Energy Minister Guy Barnett at the Strathgord­on power station dam yesterday
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