Yesterday’s energy policy announced by Scott Morrison and Energy Minister Angus Taylor — the latter presumably flown in from the undisclosed location he is normally hidden in — is what happens when a government gripped by wide-eyed political panic confronts the collapse of neoliberalism and rampant climate denialism.
It’s a package that would have been literally unthinkable five years ago, or even before the 2016 election. It not merely reverses course on two shibboleths of neoliberal thinking — deregulation and privatisation — it does so at high speed, and with a near-complete disregard for consequences.
So now we’ll be returning to de facto price regulation, with a “a maximum default offer price ” to be determined by regulators in each market. Only, it will take the regulator until after the next election to determine the price caps, so the government says it will force companies to “independently lower standing offer prices” by the start of 2019 so that Morrison can claim price falls while campaigning. From a system of price regulation in which incumbents gamed the regulations to gouge customers, we’ve moved to a system of price regulation based on the electoral cycle.
The ACCC will also be given a full suite of punitive powers to use against energy companies — “fines, penalties, enforceable undertakings, structural separation and divestiture”. Having presided over an economic and financial system that encouraged oligopolies and concentration of market power for 16 of the last 22 years, the Coalition is now furious at the result — dominant companies that use their market power to gouge customers — and wants to give the competition regulator a trust-busting power to deploy if other regulatory powers fail.
Well, good on them for seeing the light. Only, what’s good for energy is good for other key sectors where market concentration has produced negative outcomes for consumers. Why not threaten to break up the Commonwealth Bank? Or private health insurers? Or the supermarket chains? Or News Corp?
The energy sector only has itself to blame for the massive regulatory push it now faces. It exploited its power so egregiously it now faces a backlash it is powerless to resist. That doesn’t mean all of its criticisms of the government’s proposals are false. The more regulation the government heaps on the sector — especially price regulation — the more it will entrench the power of AGL, EnergyAustralia and Origin, who have the capacity and deep pockets to handle ever greater regulation compared to smaller companies that will struggle.
Then there’s the biggest reversal of all: the side of politics that has preached the need to privatise anything and everything, including the ABC, wants to enter the power generation industry itself by funding the generation of “firm or firmed generation capacity” or what Scott Morrison continues, childishly, to call “fair dinkum power”. This “Underwriting New Generation Investments program” will be a massive slush fund for coal-fired power, to be delivered via a range of means, including loans, yet to be finalised. So eager is the government to establish this fund before the election — so it can contractually lock the Commonwealth into funding new coal-fired power stations even if it loses — that it hasn’t bothered to design the program. Instead, it will “consult” with industry over coming weeks about what ways it can channel funding to coal-fired power.
This measure began life as a suggestion from the ACCC to disrupt the market power of the big three, in the absence of a divestment power. The government still insists the purpose of the program will be “to increase competition”. But given the government will be handing the ACCC a divestment power, the program is entirely redundant from a competition perspective. Why should the government risk billions of dollars funding new generation capacity when it can force the big three to break up?
Because it provides a figleaf for funding coal-fired power.
The only emissions-related restriction of any kind in the slush fund will be that “the project would be unlikely to result in an increase in electricity sector emissions to a level that is more than minus 26% of the sector’s 2005 levels by 2030”. Well, no single project, or even several projects, is going to do that anyway, especially with the “unlikely” loophole, and not when our fleet of dirty, ageing coal-fired power stations switch off in coming years.
It’s garbage policy — poor on economics, poor on climate science, poor on good governance.
Taylor is my local member and despite his complete incompetence, is unlikely to lose his seat…..such is the madness of the rusted on voter.
Huge sympathy for you Rabid….I am lucky to have a decent, competent and hard-working Labor member in Stephen Jones.
I would be gnashing my teeth if Taylor was my member..!!!
So when will Morriscum be setting up his “5 year plans” & “Gulags”?!?!
For someone who has frequently sung the praises of Neo-liberalism & Trickle Down Economics, he really is turning into quite a Stalin clone.
Socialism for coal owners. Serfdom for everybody else.
“… what Scott Morrison continues, childishly, to call ‘fair dinkum power’.”
Have the politicians not noticed that they are the *only* Australians who still use the term ‘fair dinkum’? It acts as a big signpost to political bullsit.
Re the new coal power fund, I’m furious about governments rushing into ill-considered contracts on the back of contentious policies which are yet to be taken to an election.
In the case of the East-West Link in Victoria, this approach ended up with the new Labor government having to pay private companies a truckload of public money in order to fullfil their election promise to reverse the Libs’ dodgy rushed contractual commitments. It really is the most arrogant misuse of power to try to force a future government to follow a contested policy, and treats the voters like idiots.
Labor needs to loudly warn any potential takers to expect the policy to be reversed, and not to expect any compensation…..
Exactly. Make it very, very clear.
Which it will not do, being beholden to the same BigAr$ed end of town.
“Labor, slightly less abhorrent than the LNP” – that’s a winning slogan.
Less “abhorrent” ? Possibly. Similarly competent ? A near certainty.The election in 2019 : an irrelevance! QED.
Let’s not bother then. Let’s make God acting PM and really go for ‘fair dinkum’ power.
No there how they intend subsidise coal-fired power projects the gov’t still would have to find someone willing to build & operate them. Who would do it?
If the underwriting cannot be reversed, I would suggest the new government asks for bids for new power plants, with the same kinds of guarantees, so that solar and wind come in more cheaply. The prospective coal-fired station can then decide what it wants to do as it won’t be able to compete.