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NewsTariff's Will Be Rolled Back From September
Tariff's Will Be Rolled Back From September

Tariff's Will Be Rolled Back From September

The cost of energy continues to affect our members with many of you converting to solar panels when the generous feed-in tariffs were introduced.

The tariffs were introduced for a set period to kickstart Australia’s uptake of rooftop solar by offering money to solar users who fed energy back into the grid.

A report on the ABC has found more than 275,000 households will be affected when the tariffs are unwound from September to January in New South Wales, South Australia and Victoria.

Reece Turner from Solar Citizens, a non-profit which has 80,000 members across Australia, said the households affected would be primarily older consumers sensitive to the price of electricity.

The electricity bill shock will be, on average $1,500 and 146,000 NSW customers will be hardest hit where the tariff will be wound back from 60 cents for all solar generation to 5.5-7.2 cents per kilowatt hour.

Damien Moyse, of the Alternative Technology Association, said the people with the more generous feed-in tariffs bought their solar panels when they were far more expensive than they are now.

In Victoria, consumers who were paid 25 cents per kilowatt hour for excess solar fed into the grid will have that reduced to five cents and in South Australia the 16 cent tariff will fall to 6.8 cents.

Reece Turner said the rollback for the tariffs pointed to the need for sweeping changes to the national energy market.

“At the moment I can’t just buy electricity from my neighbour, it has to go through a retailer and it’s highly regulated,” Mr Turner said.

“We’d like to see ways that individuals can buy and sell energy from each other and that will ultimately benefit the people who have solar, but also those who don’t, because electricity will become cheaper.”

Consumers urged not to make rash decisions

The report warns consumers away from rushing into decisions about how to mitigate the impact, advising that batteries are still too expensive and will not reap the financial rewards for households in the short term.

It also suggests households should consider switching their gas appliances to electric and to make sure they have smart meters installed.

Sarah McNamara, of the Australian Energy Council, said the rollback of the tariffs is an opportunity for retailers to offer competitive rates.

“What customers should be doing is looking at their retailers and what sort of usage charges apply and what sort of feed-in tariffs they’re offering, and what other bits and pieces might be part of the package a retailer is offering,” she told the ABC.

“And in NSW, the availability of smart meters should give more information to households to enable them to manage their energy use to keep their bills down.”

Mr Turner said he expected a spike in the interest of battery storage when the tariffs are rolled back.

“We will also see potentially people buying more solar panels because these people have up until now been prohibited from adding to their systems,” he said.

 

Originally posted on .

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Tariff's Will Be Rolled Back From September

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Bill
Bill from QLD commented:

Considering what Ergon Energy in North Queens land charge us per kilowatt hour for power and what they pay us for excess power (5.5/6 cents per Kw hour ) . generated from our solar panels it is tantamount to theft of our excess power. . Government needs to step in and legislate to ensure those who produce excess power from their system get adequately compensated. A minimum of 10 cents per KWH would be at least equitable. Bill McCann. 

Someone
Someone from VIC commented:

Peter from Victoria. I strongly agree with Colin from WA. It is the Governments of our States that have let us down. The taffif rates have been Gazetted in the State Government Gazettes for years setting out the reductions over years. Unfortunately not enough people knew or spoke out about this. 

bruce
bruce from NSW commented:

The system stinks, and it needs to be reviewed. So the electricity you use from the grid costs you around 24.00 approx per KWh, and they pay you around 6 to home owners who have paid for the solar panels. That's a significant mark up when the electricity companies on sell the electricity generated by home owners to other users, and what of the people who generated that power, nothing. 

colin
colin from WA commented:

We in Western Australia have had our tarrif reduced to 7 cents for quite a while, I cannot believe that in a country like ours with abundant sunshine we should be penalised for trying to generate energy without producing dangerous gas emissions. I strongly believe that we have been conned by the different Government parties in our relevant States. We should as the Fifty up Club unite and let these political parties know at the ballot box in the relevant States, we have the numbers and the power to make a difference. 

Louise
Louise from NSW commented:

Is there anywhere else where people have to almost give away a commodity and then are forced to buy it back at a massive mark-up? If it were any other product the consumer watchdogs would jump into action. We supply a premium product i.e. 'Green' electricity for which they charge a premium price and yet there doesn't seem to be anyone in power thinking that this is any kind of inequality. 

Lyn
Lyn from NSW replied to Louise:

Agreed Louise. Beats me that no one else can see that as clearly. Only way to protest is to investigate switching off panels & go back to being an ordinary user. Just did figures on my annual average solar collection and from 1/1/17 my annual average rebate will be $148.35 and elec provider will sell my collection for about $890.10......about 600% mark-up. For morality, that puts them ahead of loan sharks so why isn't NSW Dept of Fair Trading on to this? I wish I'd bought bank shares with the capital in 2010 instead, at least the divs would have helped towards elec costs from 1/1/17 instead of a useless piece of ugly equipment on my roof. And no, I didn't do it to make money, I did it when working to negate elec costs in my non-working years and because I agree with principle of solar in a sunny country. How I regret that. From 1/1/17, It my elec cost will be more than cost of food. 

Gavin
Gavin from SA commented:

The answer is simple ...the government/s must take back control of essential services, power, water, transport, health etc . they sold it for a very short sighted, short term gain, and now we are paying the price on everything from phone calls to health insurance to fuel. Not one thing that has been privatised has delivered cheaper prices but the opposite is evident in every case. 

martin
martin from QLD commented:

As always, it is the energy companies that make the money. We -who paid dearly for our PV installation- were expecting to recover that cost over the years. Just like superannuation -where you plan for a particular outcome in your doting years- only to have those plans disrupted due to retrospective changes. As for solar, we would be one of the best situated countries in the world to use Solar, yet the coal industry still holds the government to ransom (or is that actually barely disguised kickbacks?) Some of use -due to moving house perhaps- lost any of the higher benefits available to the early adopters, and are now finding that the cost of the daily charge (tripled over 3~4 years) is about the same as we can sell the average solar FIT for! And for that we only receive around one third of what the energy company successfully resells it at! 

Susan
Susan from QLD replied to martin:

Totally agree 

Anna
Anna from NSW commented:

I think the daily supply charge needs to be looked at. It varies from state to state and region to region. When I did a comparison check, Coffs Harbour residents had the highest daily supply charge in Australia. Solar panels and batteries won't reduce that cost. 

Someone
Someone from QLD commented:

Harry from QLD Won't converting my stove from gas to electric cost more, as it works only in the sunset hours . I think we should confound them and convert to slow combustion stoves with hot water attachments like in the days of yore. 

Michael
Michael from QLD commented:

Anonymous from QLD re slow combustion is the way to GO if a cheap heating can be obtained. 

Derek
Derek from NSW commented:

No matter which way you look at it, the energy companies are the only winners and beneficiaries to all of this. I have been led to believe that when the subsidy ends in NSW I will go on a scheme whereby what I use during sunlight hours comes direct from what I generate and at night I will pay for what I take from the grid. Paying me for my generated power less than they charge me to sell it back is somewhat criminal in my mind, surely wrong. 

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