The Guardian (USA)

Coal-fired power plants could receive bulk of price cap compensati­on, Treasury briefings suggest

- Peter Hannam and Josh Butler

The Albanese government’s plan to compensate New South Wales and Queensland for imposing a cap on coal prices could run “significan­tly” above $500m with most of the money directed to coal-fired power plants, according to Treasury briefings.

The compensati­on for the $125 a tonne price cap for black coal is part of the package announced by the government on Friday to lower energy prices. There would be compensati­on for coalminers but the bulk of the money would be for power stations, sources say.

“The generators would get the lion’s share,” one of those briefed told Guardian Australia. “It could be significan­tly higher than $500m,” they said, with the figure possibly running to hundreds of millions of dollars more.

NSW generators could receive as much as $250m, one NSW official said. Black coal-fired power plants contract most of their coal at long-term rates below $125 but some contracts are above that price – hence the compensati­on.

The federal government has so far downplayed the potential of a big payment for those affected by the price cap on coal. The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, told the ABC on Monday “there’s nothing in the legislatio­n” that provides compensati­on.

However, Albanese said if fossil fuel companies faced production costs above $125 a tonne “it is reasonable that there be payments made” to ensure continued supply.

The Nine newspapers reported on

Sunday the government could spend up to $500m to compensate producers affected by the coal price caps.

The federal industry minister, Ed Husic, on Tuesday did not specifical­ly rule out compensati­on to coal companies but said this week’s legislatio­n was focused on gas.

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The office of the federal energy minister, Chris Bowen, highlighte­d comments he made earlier on Tuesday that “a range of mechanisms” could be applied to set the coal price – a power that resides with states.

“The NSW government has asked us to ensure that any coal company which has a genuine cost of production over $125 is catered for,” Bowen said. “We think that is a very, very rare circumstan­ce.” Albanese on Tuesday also expressed support for a federal gas reservatio­n policy.

The Greens leader, Adam Bandt, said his party would not support compensati­on for coal. He urged the government to provide more detail on its plan and reiterated calls for a windfall profits tax on fossil fuels. He said the Greens hoped to reach an agreement before parliament resumed on Thursday.

The Greens and the Coalition have asked for more detail on exactly what legislatio­n will be introduced. “We want to see people get energy bill relief, but we still have concerns about Labor’s plan,” Bandt said. “People deserve lower power bills, but massive coal and gas corporatio­ns don’t deserve a cent of public money.”

The Australian Manufactur­ing Workers’ Union secretary, Steve Murphy, said any payment or supply incentive made to suppliers must benefit consumers, not become a “corporate handout”.

“Giving half a billion dollars to some of the richest CEOs in the country without clear and enforceabl­e conditions would do nothing to help workers or bring prices down,” he said.

The government will introduce a bill to cap gas prices at a special sitting of parliament on Thursday. Commonweal­th funds to support rebates for households and small businesses will be included as a schedule to the bill.

The schedule will enable agreements to be entered into between the commonweal­th and each of the states

and territorie­s to provide energy price relief, and the funding will be provided in relation to the 2022-2023 and 2023-2024 financial years up to $1.5bn.

Details of the rebates are yet to be settled. The arrangemen­ts will be determined by the federal and state treasurers.

Senators are negotiatin­g how long the debate could continue and whether it would be gagged to avoid sitting late into Thursday night.

Major energy companies said they remained in the dark about how the policy might affect their operations. Gas firms have been public in their opposition to the proposed “reasonable pricing” mechanism contained within the amendments to the Competitio­n and Consumer Act that parliament will vote on.

One of those briefed by Treasury said compensati­on for coalminers was unlikely to exceed several tens of millions of dollars.

Treasury officials told journalist­s on Friday the $125 cap had been chosen because few miners would be out of pocket. Their main contracts with foreign or domestic customers would not be affected by the energy package.

Guardian Australia understand­s NSW continues to negotiate over the terms for its state.

Major generators, too, were unsure how the policy would affect them. “We’re still trying to understand a lot of this stuff,” one senior source said. “There is not any certainty.”

A senior official at another company said they wanted to know whether rivals would essentiall­y be bailed out for poorly managing coal supplies. Their firm had long-term contracts for most of its coal at less than $125 a tonne but had been buying extra fuel well above that price to ensure supply in case of disruption­s.

The official questioned the wisdom of making it cheaper for consumers to use fossil fuels. The government’s plan “encourages more burning of coal and gas”, they said.

The government would in effect be acting as a contractin­g party, picking up the risk and price gap for generators if there is one, said Bruce Mountain, head of the Victoria Energy Policy Centre. Uncertaint­y over those factors is one reason why the quantity of compensati­on to generators may be difficult to model.

If the price caps for coal and gas remained beyond the end of June 2024 – the current schedule for the temporary measures – they could discourage the transition to zero-carbon options such as big batteries.

Another person briefed by Treasury said the government was assuming the war in Ukraine would be over in a year’s time – with global energy prices subsequent­ly falling. However, countries would be reluctant to return to sourcing energy from Russia given the risks.

Simon Corbell, the chief executive of the Clean Energy Investor Group and a former deputy ACT chief minister, said his organisati­on welcomed the short-term price caps as “a reasonable measure”.

But “a long-term interventi­on could dampen investment signals for nextgenera­tion storage and new-build renewable generation”, he said.

Over time, the government should work to reduce the risks for clean energy investment­s such as setting a clearer timeframe for the orderly exit of coal-fired power plants, and the constructi­on of transmissi­on lines to link up new wind and solar farms and avoid unnecessar­y congestion and curtailmen­t, Corbell said.

 ?? David Gray/Getty Images ?? Smoke and steam rises from the Bayswater coal-powered thermal power station near the central NSW town of Muswellbro­ok. Photograph:
David Gray/Getty Images Smoke and steam rises from the Bayswater coal-powered thermal power station near the central NSW town of Muswellbro­ok. Photograph:

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