The market for renewable energy certificates in Australia is currently in freefall. Prices are dropping like a stone, making the cost of being green much cheaper for your retailer. Make sure it gets cheaper for you, too.
The Australian Energy Market Commission (AEMC) is officially starting its Accelerating Smart Meter Deployment (ASMD) reforms. If you don’t already have a smart meter, you will by the end of 2030.
Electricity bills comprise wholesale costs, network charges, and retail margins.
As energy consumers, we're generally not that interested in the detailed breakdown between these components — we only care about the final bill price. But each component matters and contributes toward our bills.
The Australian Energy Regulator (AER) today approved the electricity distributors’ annual pricing proposals for network charges in 2023-24.
Distributors operate as regulated monopolies, with network pricing governed by the AER. Electricity distributors must present their network pricing proposals to the AER every year for approval, with the new pricing rolling out on 1 July every year.
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The AER annual pricing review relates only to the network charge component of a retail electricity bill.
Here's a quick summary of the estimated increase or decrease in the network component of the 'typical bill' for Residential and SME Business customers in each zone.
State
Distribution zone
Residential
SME business
NSW
Ausgrid
$24.55
$52.92
NSW
Endeavour Energy
21.56
$45/76
NSW
Essential Energy
$90.97
$167.18
VIC
Citipower
$2.39
$7.14
VIC
Jemena
$33.70
$120.39
VIC
United Energy
$18.99
$34.92
VIC
Powercor
$31.14
$44.10
VIC
Ausnet Services
$29.63
$66.64
QLD
Energex
$39.31
$42.04
QLD
Ergon
-$2.23
$9.67
SA
SA Power Networks
$12.54
$58.56
TAS
TasNetworks
$17.40
$41.65
ACT
Evoenergy
-$257.31
-$760.55
NT
Power and Water Corporation
$211.44
$187.10
The most notable price change for the coming year is in ACT Evoeneregy, where network pricing is estimated to decrease by $257.31 for typical residential bills, and by a whopping $760.55 for SME.
The decrease in revenue is predominantly due to the operation of the ACT government’s large-scale feed-in tariff jurisdictional scheme. Evoenergy has typically recovered costs from its customers in the past under the scheme but this year it does not need to recover costs because the scheme is in surplus. This is partially offset by higher-than-forecast inflation.
The market for renewable energy certificates in Australia is currently in freefall. Prices are dropping like a stone, making the cost of being green much cheaper for your retailer. Make sure it gets cheaper for you, too.
The Australian Energy Market Commission (AEMC) is officially starting its Accelerating Smart Meter Deployment (ASMD) reforms. If you don’t already have a smart meter, you will by the end of 2030.
There is a market-wide price reset that takes effect from 1 July every year. Your switching decisions through this transition depend on a few key factors. Here's a detailed breakdown to help guide your decision.
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