Gulf News

Australian energy retail faces change

Wholesale charges have fallen by about 30% from last year and that should start to flow to customers

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Australia’s energy retailers face further government interventi­on in the market if they don’t move to lower power prices for consumers after a drop in wholesale charges, according to Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg.

Wholesale charges have fallen by about 30 per cent from last year and that should start to flow to customers, Frydenberg said yesterday on Sky News. While the companies are “on notice,” the government will await a report from the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission later this month before deciding if more interventi­on is required and in what form.

“We need to see prices come down more,” Frydenberg said. “Prices have moved, but certainly it’s not enough. We want to see prices come down more and we’re confident that will be the case.”

Energy ministers from Australia’s six states and two territorie­s met last week as the federal government seeks an agreement by August on its contentiou­s National Energy Guarantee, which aims to lower electricit­y prices and require generators to guarantee reliable supply and limit emissions. The nation, one of

Prime Minister Turnbull’s interventi­on in the gas market via a proposed domestic supply mechanism has led to prices falling by as much as 50 per cent.

the world’s biggest coal and gas exporters, has been mired in an energy crisis that has pushed up local power prices and cast doubt on the reliabilit­y of its grid.

Turnbull interventi­on

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s interventi­on in the gas market via a proposed domestic supply mechanism has led to prices falling by as much as 50 per cent, according to the ACCC, Frydenberg said. He also criticised energy company AGL Ltd for a 2015 agreement to export 254 petajoules of gas to Asia. It has since decided to build an LNG import terminal to bring gas back into the country.

“It was a terrible decision, it short-changed its customers. It was short-sighted, it was irresponsi­ble and AGL have a lot of explaining to do to its customers,” Frydenberg said. “Now they’re looking to build expensive import terminals to provide exactly that same service.”

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