Treasurer Jim Chalmers has said the government’s preferred form of market intervention is to cap the price of gas and coal sold to power stations,last week reiterating he was reluctant to impose a windfall profits tax and warning handouts would drive inflation.
The Australian Energy Council,an industry group representing the nation’s key electricity suppliers including Origin Energy,AGL and EnergyAustralia,acknowledged that a mix of local factors and a global energy crunch had driven coal and gas prices higher since the start of the year,but has called on the federal government to proceed with caution.
“In this scenario,there are no ‘preferable’ solutions’,” chief executive Sarah McNamara said. “No approach is straightforward or without negative consequences,so governments should carefully weigh their options when deciding whether or not to intervene in the market.”
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Opponents of the proposed price caps,including the coal and gas companies whose sales revenue stands to be affected,have cautioned the government that such a move could deter investment needed to develop new sources of domestic supplies that would be crucial to putting downward pressure on prices in the longer run.
The energy crisis is being exacerbated by the war in Ukraine,boosting prices and driving huge spikes in sales revenue for Australian coal and gas exporters. But it is also unleashing economic pain in Australia’s domestic energy markets,as gas prices have more than doubled in the past year and wholesale electricity costs have reached their highest levels on record.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Monday that other countries were taking unprecedented steps to address energy prices and he was prepared to do the same.