I recently received exciting news that my electricity bill will go down and with my ânormal punterâ hat on, that feels like a relief after years of massive increases.
In fairness, the regulators have performed a miracle to take the pressure off, given that solar, the carbon tax and the RET were apparently going to cause endlessly increasing electricity price rises and damn us all to eternity according to all and sundry who want those schemes axed. Â But no, not in NSW. So what gives?
Well interestingly, in April 2014, the NSW Government announced a decision to remove the regulation of retail electricity prices from 1st of July 2014. In their submission to the RET Review they noted that âNSW price deregulation may also lead to additional savings from the RET for customers who were on standard contracts, if retailersâ actual costs in meeting their RET obligations are lower than would have been allowed for in IPARTâs pricing determination and there is sufficient competition to ensure cost savings are passed throughâ
The outcome suggests that what they predicted has come to light â" â and lo, my bill has reduced thanks to the RETâ.
Without doubt, Retailers have had it pretty sweet in NSW.
They have been allowed to pass on the full $40 price of RECâs to consumers, whilst buying them at substantially lower prices on the trading market. For years.
They have also been allowed to capture the value of exported solar energy and realize windfall profits by on-selling it t your neighbors. No-one really knows how much this is worth because Retailers arenât required to report who signs up to (voluntary) solar export tariffs and the Queensland Government liked this idea so much they have just done the same thing. Anecdotal evidence and some quick calculations from installation data of customers on Net billing would suggest its in the order of $5M-$10M p/a.
Now undoubtedly there area whole lot of politics behind this change of electricity price in Australiaâs most populous State.  But one thing is clear; as modelling tells us over and over and over again, the RET helps to reduce wholesale electricity costs and when the market is forced to pass on those savings in a timely manner (which it previously wasnât), consumers save money. Because of solar.
And yet at the same time as my electricity bills are going down,  25 Coalition MPs, comprising about half the government backbench in the lower house, have written to Environment Minister Greg Hunt and Industry Minister Ian MacFarlane calling for the RET to be dramatically scaled back. Staggeringly, they have used the excuse that aluminum smelters should be exempt from RET cost imposts (even though they already get exemptions), so they continue to use any old dirty energy they want with utter impunity âbecause they are very important, we need them for the stability of the gridâ.Â
WTF?
Here we have politicians arguing, threatening us that the very stability of electricity supply in Australia is at risk if we donât cut the RET?
Give me break!
Our networks can cope with all sorts of stuff; we saw 65% of demand supplied by wind power last week, we see huge spikes in demand with weather events, and these numb nuts are going to try and suggest that a staged write down of demand by aluminium producers canât be managed? And what about the prospect of them actually buying renewable energy, especially those in Tasmania  who have access to the best wind resources in the world or the voluminous hydro energy available?
Narrow minded, short sighted, alarmist, non factual bullshit. Sorry, but in NSW we have clear evidence that electricity prices are falling because of the RET and a massive opportunity to leverage reduced emissions, increased renewable energy, a new energy future and cleaner aluminium and yet, the best that 25 MPâs, our Government, can come up with is âlet them pollute, with impunity and no incentive to clean up their act or do anything differentâ
I wish I was surprised but Iâm not. We are governed by Luddites.
Photo Credit: RET and Smaller Electricity Bills/shutterstock
Authored by:
Nigel Morris
Nigel Morris has been involved in the PV industry for almost 20 years and is the founder of SolarBusinessServices, one of Australiaâs leading PV consultancies. He began his PV career as the manufacturing manager with one of Australiaâs pioneers in renewable energy and during his 5 years there, was a system designer, manufacturer, installer, salesman and company director. In 1997 he moved ...
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