Julia
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"Green schemes have emerged as a new driver of price increases," warns IPART.
It's the result of federal and NSW incentives for households to install solar panels on their roofs. The bigger than expected take-up has overtones of Labor's disastrous home insulation program. It serves the yearning by higher-income environmentally aware consumers to save the planet by acting locally while getting other consumers to subsidise their power bills.
Sims slams the combination of federal and NSW solar panel incentives as "an expensive, cost-ineffective way of reducing carbon emissions". "Its cost will be borne either by consumers or taxpayers for many years to come," the IPART ruling says. Of course, the whole point of a carbon tax is to eliminate the need for such high-cost abatement. Yet the power price increases fuelled by high-cost green schemes are inflaming the catch-22 backlash against a lower-cost carbon price.
Hence the exponential rise we are seeing in basic bills to households.
i.e. the costs involved in providing subsidies to people wealthy enough to outlay the necessary capital to take advantage of the scheme are being passed on to those least able to afford these increases.
So you have the comfortable middle class, including those who are not even driven by environmental considerations but rather the notion of something for free, having their overall financial situation improved whilst the impoverished and disadvantaged pay the price.