The Northland Age

Power plays as parties dispute

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Should electricit­y prices be next in the Government’s cross-hairs? This week, a co-authored report from FIRST Union, the NZCTU, and 350 Aotearoa argued that, in the decade since the partial privatisat­ion of our electricit­y companies, the four big generatorr­etailers (known as “the gentailers”) have delivered billions in excess dividends to shareholde­rs.

Excess dividends are payments to shareholde­rs in excess of profits earned. The report was delivered as evidence that the partial privatisat­ion of electricit­y generation in 2013 has delivered great windfalls for shareholde­rs while leaving New Zealanders out in the cold and footing the bill.

Further, the report claims excess profits went direct to shareholde­r pockets at the cost of increased renewable energy generation. All the while, it is claimed, the four large gentailers have spent the past decade “generating scarcity, prioritisi­ng dividends over struggling households and the planet”.

The report says the Government, as the largest shareholde­r of three gentailers, should submit a minimum profit reinvestme­nt target at the next shareholde­r meetings to rapidly develop new renewable generation and require future dividends received from its shareholdi­ng be used to buy back gentailer shares, to be held by a special purpose vehicle with the objective of maintainin­g stable and secure energy supply.

CTU economist Craig Renney said: “The Government has recently acted on the banking sector, and on petrol companies to ensure that they are delivering better outcomes for New Zealanders. This report demonstrat­es that there is a pressing need to do this for the electricit­y sector as well.”

In response, Genesis says residentia­l electricit­y price increases have been below inflation “for a number of years”, and the proportion spent on electricit­y out of total average household income has decreased over the 10 years to 2019, currently representi­ng around 1.9 per cent of average household income.

Further, a statement from the company said: “The renewable component of New Zealand’s electricit­y generation system has increased from around 72 per cent 10 years ago to around 85 per cent renewable now, and is on track to become 96-98 per cent renewable by 2030.”

Last week, New Zealand electricit­y — albeit low in demand during temperate weather — was 99 per cent renewable-generated.

What cannot be ignored is that excess dividends are being paid out while we are paying disproport­ionately for electricit­y. One major website ranks New

Zealand’s electricit­y prices as some of the most expensive in the world.

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