Government reforms driving competition and fairer energy deals

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has found that access to affordable, reliable and sustainable energy is improving on the back of strong action taken by the Liberal National Government to deliver a fairer deal on energy.

The Inquiry into the National Electricity Market - August 2019 report is the second in the ACCC's ongoing inquiry into the National Electricity Market initiated by this Government.

The report welcomes the introduction of the Retail Electricity Code which enabled the Default Market Offer (DMO) to take effect on 1 July 2019.

The ACCC found that since the start of the code there has been a significant fall in standing offer prices. The Government's price safety net has locked in better deals for up to 794,000 residential and small business customers on standing offers in New South Wales, South Australia and south-east Queensland.

Based on initial analysis, the ACCC estimates households on standing offers could have already saved up to $190.

While it is early days, this is welcome news.

There has been a reduction in sneaky discounting practices, with retailers moving away from the use of conditional discounts based on excessively high standing offers. From 1 July, retailers are now required to advertise their offers against a common benchmark.

The report restated the ACCC's support for the Government's continued action on a range of reforms the ACCC recommended in the Retail Electricity Pricing Inquiry last year, including the Underwriting New Generation Investment Program, and the Business Energy Advice Program to help small businesses understand their energy savings opportunities and choose the best energy plan.

Importantly, competition is alive in the market, with smaller retailers taking on the big three energy companies and increasing their market share by providing cheaper offers.

The report highlights it still pays to shop around for a better deal. As at 12 July 2019, the cheapest market offer is $290'$380 lower than the price safety net in NSW, $260 lower in south-east Queensland and $300 lower in SA.

However, there is still more to do. The Government has long warned that energy companies must put their customers first, and the market practices the ACCC has described as 'unacceptable and unsustainable' must stop.

That is why the Government is committed to passing our 'Big Stick' legislation, which compliments the DMO and provides the ACCC with real teeth to hold power companies to account for their actions in the market.

The Government will bring this legislation back to the Parliament at the earliest opportunity.

When these important reforms were introduced to the 45th Parliament earlier this year, Labor opposed the legislation 13 times. Labor has a choice: side with Australian households and small businesses, or side with the big energy companies and their massive profits.