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Well the QLD Govt bit the bullet, listened to the electorate and is combining the previously hived off sections that were to be sold under the previous Little Dictator. It will remain in the hands of the public and apparently mean our power will rise ~$30 this year, while others states will be at least triple that.
What, are the Queensland Government buying back previously sold Power Stations? That's a good sign.
Australia is tying itself up in knots, over political correctness, which in the end will result in a serious energy crisis.
I bet Tassie isn't going to run down their reserve capacity, to levels that don't cover domestic demand.
Bad housing design is driving up power prices...
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-01-03/why-bad-housing-design-pumps-up-prices-for-everyone/8158168
The LNP scrapped the energy efficiency and disclosure legislation of the previous Labor regime because it was too onerous on developers, the Premier at that time being one himself. You couldn't get more poorly designed than having an all brick and tile home in the hottest parts of the country, but that is what you get in WA, even though the earliest housing was light weight, low capacitance structure with novel things called verandahs, tin roofs and eaves.
Tasmania has a range of state-owned corporations ranging from the iconic Hydro Electric Corporation to the not so vibrant Macquarie Point Development Corporation.
...
Not one discernible positive outcome came from the splitting of the old Hydro Electric Commission....
...
If the state-owned companies were entirely independent of the government of the day and operated without any political input then the economic base of Tasmania would be vastly different.
but the idea that you have numerous players all doing their own thing independently, when we're talking about one underlying technical system, just isn't working.
The most significant point in this article isn't what it says but that it appears in the print edition of a News Ltd newspaper.
http://www.themercury.com.au/news/o...r/news-story/1ec3dd2d8fd26c327c10e44dab34b501
So it seems the wheel is starting to turn as it becomes increasingly clear that trying to apply market principles to natural monopolies just isn't working as the economic theorists thought it would.
Someone at the ACCC is probably still recovering after learning that we ended competition in generation in Tasmania in order to cut prices. And prices did indeed drop, the very same day Hydro acquired it's only significant competitor. Engineers, tradies and even the cleaner understand exactly why that's the case but those with their theories are probably still scratching their heads as to why.
The reason, of course, is that the technical inefficiency which comes from operating a single engineering system as discreet parts vastly exceeds any gain you'll ever make by means of labour productivity and so on. And our state owned utilities were the third lowest cost in the developed world to start with so there never was much to be gained.
With prices to consumers now higher in real terms right across the country than they were before this process began and the looming price jumps and supply problems in Vic and SA it's time for a proper evaluation of how to get back to something that's affordable and reliable.
Personally I don't have an ideological view on public versus private ownership, I just want it to be reasonably efficient in operation. Either private with some regulation or public, but the idea that you have numerous players all doing their own thing independently, when we're talking about one underlying technical system, just isn't working.
Latest one - proposed $350 million to build a high operating cost power station in SA generating about 250 MW. It's even sillier when you realise that 2 x 270 MW units are sitting idle at Northern (Port Augusta) and there's 239 MW sitting idle at Pelican Point (Adelaide). There's nothing wrong with any of those, it's just that their owners decided to cease operating.
But sure, spend another $350 million to build what we've already got sitting there unused three times over. No amount of "competition" and giving consumers a choice over what name appears on the bill is going to recover anywhere near that amount of wasted capital.
+1. Even people not in the industry like me can see it's a dog's breakfast.
I think there has been a lot of stupid thinking that we should be more like the USA and let the market compete without realising that we have a much different dynamics to the US, much smaller market therefore less investment available , spread over the same geographical area as the US.
FFS, we have a population less that of California. We need a national body of engineers to determine our most efficient network based on reliability, price and emissions in that order. The energy market is just one reason to get rid of the States,there are lots of others as well.
Australian manufacturers are struggling to get a hold of enough gas, Industry Minister Greg Hunt warns.
Manufacturers have warned of a crunch point in supply from mid-2017 to late-2018.
Effing Greg effing Hunt shouldn't be warning anyone, he and his effing useless mates should be DOING something about it.
For a start they could sequester enough gas for local consumption before any goes overseas, and or put an export tax on what does go elsewhere.
OUR resources, OUR benefit.
I'll vote for whatever Party takes energy security seriously, even if it's Pauline Hanson.
Pity Bob Katter is not in my State, and pity Tony Windsor didn't get elected.
Damn bogan voters in Armidale.
Effing Greg effing Hunt shouldn't be warning anyone, he and his effing useless mates should be DOING something about it.
Now, can anyone find me a politician or business leader thinking 70 years into the future?
There's the problem.
I'm sure Smurph can tell us more about this...
Tasmanian power: Hydro prepares state's biggest gas-powered generator to help preserve dam levels
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-01-09/hydro-to-fire-up-tamar-valley-power-generator/8170590
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