| Household electricity prices to rise, year on year |
AN agreement to try to reach a deal by 2015 on emissions of
carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases is the bottom line of the past
fortnight's climate change jamboree in In nominal terms, the average electricity price increase is estimated
at more than 37 per cent across
all Australian states. A large share of the cost is due to
increased charges from the regulated "poles and wire"
component. According to the distribution and transmission businesses,
these stem from the need to renew a system falling into disrepair as a
result of previous clampdowns on allowable spending. Energy users claim
the allowable cost increases are excessive, especially in NSW, The AEMC puts the direct contribution of the carbon tax on increased
household prices at 8 per cent.
However, the indirect effects of other greenhouse gas emission reduction
measures need to be added to this to provide an accurate picture. The
most direct of these is the passing on of the carbon tax in retail
margins. This adds about a 1 per cent supplementary impost. In addition, there are two other effects. These comprise, first, a higher wholesale cost of electricity. This
is a result of government regulatory risk on carbon, which prevents new
power stations using coal from being built. The coal for those power
stations is cheap and abundant and the cost of new power stations is not
increasing. The risk-induced higher wholesale prices from preventing new
coal stations from being built add a further 7 per cent to prices. Second, there is the effect of the various renewable energy programs.
These are divided into requirements to use the output of high-cost,
large-scale facilities (mainly wind farms) and even higher cost
small-scale facilities (such as rooftop panels). In addition the costs
include high feed-in prices resulting from state-based regulations.
Together these add a further 3 per cent to electricity charges. So the costs of the greenhouse gas restraining measures means an
increase in electricity prices of 19
per cent. Hence, an average household would see its annual
electricity bill rise about $300
to about $1900 a year in 2013-14.
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