The real cause of electricity price rises in NSW



Similar documents
Business Council of Australia. Submission to the Owen Inquiry into Electricity Supply in NSW

Electricity network services. Long-term trends in prices and costs

NSW Business Chamber Submission to the Special Commission of Inquiry into Electricity Transactions

Becoming an Electricity Retailer

Changes in regulated electricity prices from 1 July 2012

Changes in regulated electricity prices from 1 July 2012

Clean Energy Council submission to Queensland Competition Authority Regulated Retail Electricity Prices for Interim Consultation Paper

Submission to the Consultative Reference Committee Inquiry into Electricity Supply in New South Wales

ATUG and Network Marketing

Retailer Margins in Victoria s Electricity Market. Discussion Paper

Farm Energy IQ. Energy Buying Options in Deregulated Markets 2/16/2015. Introductions. Deregulation of Energy Markets

Network Pricing Trends

Powering NSW. March 2009

The New Zealand Electricity Market (NZEM)

AER Issues Paper Regulating innovative energy selling business models under the National Energy Retail law

Overview 3 Electricity price increases 4 Capital and operating expenditure 6 Demand side management 7 Issues with sales/demand forecasts 8

Market Power in the Victorian Retail Energy Market

Unions NSW. Submission to Owen Inquiry into Electricity Supply in NSW

SUBMISSION TO THE SENATE SELECT COMMITTEE ON ELECTRICITY PRICES

Developments in Utilities Prices

Case Study: The Accomplishments and Shortcomings of Australia s Renewable Energy Target: A Pure Market-Based Support Mechanism

Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal. Customer engagement on prices for monopoly services

AEMC Electricity Price Trends report released

Promoting the long term interests of electricity customers. IPART s submission SCER on network policies and regulation

Submission to Australian Competition Tribunal on Application by AGL Energy Limited for merger authorisation ACT 1 of 2014

Consumer Action Law Centre Policy and Campaigns Plan

Response to the Energy White Paper Issues Paper PREPARED BY EMC ENGINEERING FOR THE AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRY

Submission to the Senate Select Committee on Electricity Prices

Although not a Sydney or NSW resident at the time, I was a frequent visitor from my then home in London.

Information Paper. Investigation into prices for electricity and water services in the ACT

The Taskforce's Proposed Process to Reduce Energy Costs in Australia

Issues Paper. Investigation into Retail Prices for Non-Contestable Electricity Customers in the ACT

Energy Savings Agency: The Greens plan to fix Australia s energy system

What are the different ways cities and their citizens get their electricity?

Energy Market Reform Working Group (EMRWG) Consultation Paper New Products and Services in the Electricity Market

NATIONAL COMPETITION POLICY REVIEW. Of the AMBULANCE SERVICES ACT 1986 GOVERNMENT RESPONSE

The contribution of monopoly network service providers to electricity price rises in the National Electricity Market Bruce Mountain

Health & the economic crisis: the Australian case

AGL proposal for regulated retail gas prices in NSW for

LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL INQUIRY INTO THE LEASING OF ELECTRICITY INFRASTRUCTURE NSW GOVERNMENT SUBMISSION

2013 Residential Electricity Price Trends

Changes in regulated gas prices from 1 July 2013

A fair comparison: PIAC submission to the Productivity Commission Inquiry, Electricity Network Regulation

Western Australia and the Northern Territory are not connected to the NEM, primarily due to the distance between networks.

AER Submission. Competition Policy Review Draft Report

COTTON AUSTRALIA LIMITED

Causes of residential electricity bill changes in Victoria, 1995 to prepared for: Victorian Electricity Distribution Businesses

WORK HEALTH AND SAFETY SOCIAL SCIENCES

Customer Service Standards. for the. Supply of Electricity. Permanent Residents of. Residential Parks

Briefing Note to Government on the Review of the Tasmanian Electricity Supply Industry

"Calculating PAWA's initial network revenue caps" - NT Power's response

Causes of residential electricity bill changes in Victoria, 1995 to prepared for: Victorian Electricity Distribution Businesses

ENERGY ADVISORY COMMITTEE. Electricity Market Review : Electricity Tariff

Saving energy, growing jobs

2016 Energy Analysis Series

Competitive Electricity Prices: An Update 1

Tasmanian Transmission Revenue Proposal

Realising the benefits of smart meters for consumers and industry

Mortgage Wisdom in Focus

COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA Retail Entitlement Offer Booklet

Your rights to return goods bought online a scan of the return policies of online retailers in Australia

NSWIC NEW SOUTH WALES IRRIGATORS COUNCIL

FACT SHEET. NEM fast facts:

The NSW Business Chamber (the Chamber) welcomes the opportunity to comment on IPART s Pricing VET under Smart and Skilled draft report.

Policy options for maximising downward pressure on electricity prices

Nothing to gain, plenty to lose:

The. Dollars & Sense. of Deregulation: How businesses can improve the efficiency of their electricity spending

NSW Electricity Network and Prices Inquiry. Final Report

Review of the Energy Savings Scheme. Position Paper

Changing Electricity and Energy Efficiency in the United Kingdom

South Australia State Tax Review. February 2015

Massachusetts Saving Electricity:

Chapter 2. Description and history of home warranty insurance schemes

15 April 2011 Re: Expansion of the Victorian Energy Efficiency Target

Business in South Australia - Current Scenario

APRIL 2014 ELECTRICITY PRICES AND NETWORK COSTS

Submission to the Electricity Market Review September 2014

Gas Prices Fact Sheet Lumo Advantage Prices included in this fact sheet are effective from 30 July Offer Details:

Submission to the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal. ~ Draft Report & Determination - Retail tariffs & charges for electricity ~

A SOLAR FUTURE. Powering Queensland s renewable energy industries

NSWIC NEW SOUTH WALES IRRIGATORS COUNCIL

ENERGY SAVINGS ACTION PLAN

Smart meters: Removing regulatory barriers and maintaining consumer safety for a market-led roll out of smart meters in New South Wales

Will Icelandic households benefit from a sub-sea cable to Britain? Dr. Ásgeir Jónsson

2014 Residential Electricity Price Trends

2. Executive Summary. Emissions Trading Systems in Europe and Elsewhere

Port Jackson Partners

This course has specialisations available in financial planning and banking

Retail Operating Costs A REPORT PREPARED FOR THE ECONOMIC REGULATION AUTHORITY OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA. March 2012

The Future of Broadband Internet Access in Canada

An Efficient, Productive and Sustainable Electricity Supply for Queensland

Blessing or a Curse (Deregulation of Electric Companies)

A guide to the AER s review of gas network prices in Victoria

Inquiry into microeconomic reform in Western Australia Submission by Martin Sheridan, December 2013

2015 Retail Competition Review Approach Paper

Queensland s Unsustainable Electricity Pricing Methodology

Perspectives from Gas Users

BRIEFING PAPER: GROWING QUEENSLAND COMMUNITY ENERGY

Transcription:

University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts 2012 The real cause of electricity price rises in NSW Sharon Beder University of Wollongong, sharonb@uow.edu.au Publication Details Beder, S. (2012). The real cause of electricity price rises in NSW. The Conversation, (03 September) Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: research-pubs@uow.edu.au

The real cause of electricity price rises in NSW Abstract As the political debate around rising power prices and the carbon tax heats up, there is a renewed debate around the privatisation of electricity distribution in New South Wales. With power prices sure to be a hot topic in the next federal election, it s worth taking a broader look at the history behind the deregulation of Australian energy. The mid-nineties saw State Government s agree to privatise swaths of public infrastructure, including electricity, under pressure from the then Howard Government. In each state, the generation, transmission, distribution and retail supply of electricity were separated and corporatised. Barriers to interstate trade were removed and open access to electricity networks established. In preparation for privatisation, a pricing formula was set for the newly formed transmission and distribution corporations because they are natural monopolies and not subject to competition. Governments traditionally charged electricity rates that covered the actual costs of transmission and distribution and were accountable to the electorate for any dividends they squeezed out of the system. Keywords cause, electricity, real, price, nsw, rises Disciplines Arts and Humanities Law Publication Details Beder, S. (2012). The real cause of electricity price rises in NSW. The Conversation, (03 September) This journal article is available at Research Online: http://ro.uow.edu.au/lhapapers/1585

3 September 2012, 1.47pm AEST The real cause of electricity price rises in NSW Author 1. Sharon Beder Visiting Professor at University of Wollongong Disclosure Statement In 2007 Sharon Beder was commissioned by Unions NSW to prepare a submission on their behalf for the Owen Inquiry into Electricity Supply in NSW because of her previous research on electricity privatisation, most notably her book Power Play published in 2003. uow.edu.au Provides funding as a Member of The Conversation.

Electricity price rises can be traced to a number of factors. AAP Image As the political debate around rising power prices and the carbon tax heats up, there is a renewed debate around the privatisation of electricity distribution in New South Wales. With power prices sure to be a hot topic in the next federal election, it s worth taking a broader look at the history behind the deregulation of Australian energy. The mid-nineties saw State Government s agree to privatise swaths of public infrastructure, including electricity, under pressure from the then Howard Government. In each state, the generation, transmission, distribution and retail supply of electricity were separated and corporatised. Barriers to interstate trade were removed and open access to electricity networks established. In preparation for privatisation, a pricing formula was set for the newly formed transmission and distribution corporations because they are natural monopolies and not subject to competition. Governments traditionally charged electricity rates that covered the actual costs of transmission and distribution and were accountable to the electorate for any dividends they squeezed out of the system. However, without competition, private companies could theoretically charge whatever they wanted because electricity is an essential service and without competition the ratepayer would have no choice but to pay. The pricing formula was supposed to ensure that the future privatised corporations would have a guaranteed return based on the value of their assets, thus ensuring they would have an

incentive to invest in the infrastructure they owned. This was necessary because in a privatised electricity industry there would be no market mechanism to provide this incentive and no government planners deciding what maintenance and upgrades were necessary in the public interest. The distribution corporations were in this way prepared for privatisation, which occurred in Victoria and South Australia. In NSW they remained in government ownership and for many years all efforts to privatise electricity was thwarted by public opposition. However, public opposition in NSW has not stopped successive government attempts to privatise electricity and the 2011 privatisation of the retail sector, and the trading rights to the electricity generated, by an already unpopular Labor government prepared the way for the incoming Liberal government to privatise the generators. Until the decision was made to privatise, price shocks to household consumers and retailers associated with fluctuating wholesale power prices in the national electricity market had been avoided in NSW because both retail and generation businesses were publicly-owned. In addition the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) has agreed to large electricity price increases in NSW since 2007 to facilitate the sale of the retail electricity sector and to compensate private retailers for the risks associated with an electricity market subject to price manipulation by electricity generating companies. At the same time, the government-owned distribution corporations have taken advantage of the new pricing formulas to invest in assets and reap the profits intended for the private companies that would eventually buy them. This was a win-win-win situation for the NSW government. Not only has it been able to get large dividends from these corporations but the resultant rise in electricity costs will make the corporations very attractive to private buyers when they are finally sold, creating a huge one-off inflow of money for the government. What is more, the rising cost of electricity distribution is creating public dissatisfaction with government ownership, eroding the opposition to privatisation. Once sold, the private companies will reap the returns always meant for them, and the price rises leading up to the sale will be blamed on government inefficiencies rather than privatisation. So now we are in a situation where the federal government is blaming the state governments for electricity price rises, and in particular, the gold-plating of the network of poles and wires, and advocating privatisation as the solution. And they are being cheered on by a chorus of vested interests. At the next election the NSW public will have a choice between a party that privatised the electricity retailers and a party that privatised the generators. Not really a choice at all. Yet if the Liberals win they will undoubtably claim a mandate to go ahead with privatising the poles and wires.