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Wednesday, 16 October 2024
Household battery scheme to form part of Labor's pre-election plan for low- and middle-income earners.
Labor and the Coalition are both looking at policies to spur household battery adoption.
The
ABC understands the Albanese government is giving serious consideration
to a plan that would remove up-front costs for households wanting to
install batteries, heat pumps and other appliances.
What's next?
The Coalition is due to announce its nuclear and energy policy platform before Christmas.
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Labor
and the Coalition are on a collision course over how best to accelerate
household access to batteries, heat pumps and other electrical
appliances as the government sharpens cost-of-living supports aimed at
winning Anthony Albanese a second term.
The
ABC understands the government is giving serious consideration to a
bold pre-election plan that would boost the affordability of green
energy technology for low- and middle-income households.
This
could include a taxpayer-backed higher education loan-style scheme to
reduce up-front capital costs that limit access to batteries for
price-constrained consumers.
Advocates
say installing more batteries across millions of homes would complement
Australia's world-beating rooftop solar adoption rates, which threaten
to overwhelm the grid with unusable power.
It
would also help make the energy transition away from fossil fuels more
equitable and speed up emissions reductions from power generation.
Sources
who asked not to be named, so they could speak openly about the
government's considerations, said work on the idea had been underway all
year at lower levels of the ministry and bureaucracy.
However,
with an election due by mid-May, the issue has now been elevated to the
prime minister's office, which is understood to be "devoting more
effort" to the issue.
They cautioned that Labor had not made any hard decisions on the scale or cost of its plans.
Expectations
are also growing that the Coalition is developing its own comparable
household electrification incentive scheme, with one source telling the
ABC they will be taking a solar and battery policy to the election.
Green energy initiative
Spurring expanded access to battery storage is seen by experts as a way to manage and encourage rapid take-up of rooftop solar.
Batteries
allow homes to capture solar energy that would otherwise flow into the
grid at times when supply tends to outstrip demand.
Consumers
can use that stored energy to run heaters and other appliances during
early evenings, helping ease pressure on the national electricity grid
when demand is greatest and renewables supply lessens.
While
batteries and other electrical appliances such as water heaters are
steadily falling in cost, they still require households to stump up
several thousand dollars up-front.
Consumers
subsequently make their money back via lower energy bills or income
from dispatching spare energy from their batteries into the grid at peak
times when prices are greater.
Mr
Bowen said the pilot covering the Thirroul-based postcode of 2515 was
designed to generate "meaningful data" for the government on how solar
panels and batteries affected the grid.
State
and territory energy ministers agreed earlier this year to put more
consumers in charge of the energy they generated on their roofs, as well
as batteries "that they'll have available in their driveway," Mr Bowen
said at the launch.
"We have plans right across the country, which I'll be saying more about in the coming weeks and months," Mr Bowen said.
Nationals
Leader David Littleproud signalled early this year that he was looking
to divert tens of billions of dollars earmarked by Labor for
transmission line investments into a supercharged household solar and
battery scheme.
Since
then, the Coalition, led by Mr Littleproud and Opposition Leader Peter
Dutton, have embraced nuclear power, while keeping the door open to
greater household access to rooftop renewables and storage.
Mr
Littleproud told The Australian Financial Review in February that he
was "eager to calibrate the money that is spent to support households
and businesses to look at the opportunities of putting renewables, and
particularly solar, on an environment you can't destroy — on rooftops".
Renewables 'cheaper way to run a household'
Rewiring
Australia founder Saul Griffith, who helped Mr Bowen launch the
Thirroul pilot on Tuesday, said the scheme would show how
"electrification is a cheaper way to run a household than paying cash
every week for fossil fuels".
"We
know from modelling that an Australian household, if they went electric
today, they'd save $154,000 … over the 15-year lifetime of those
objects."
By contrast,
"we buy cheap machines today with a subscription to petrol and gas
that's really expensive. When you buy solar, it's like buying 20 years
of really, really cheap electricity up-front".
The
announcement came as shadow energy spokesperson Ted O'Brien promised
the Coalition would elevate the role of gas by expanding an Albanese
government taxpayer-funded green energy support scheme the Coalition
once condemned as a "blank cheque for renewables".
Mr
O'Brien told a pipeline industry conference in Adelaide on Tuesday that
including gas in Labor's capacity investment scheme — which Mr Bowen
launched alongside the states last year to underwrite 32 gigawatts of
wind, solar and storage — would elevate the energy source.
"We
will determine the amount and timing of capacity to be called for under
each category, as well as the structure of the contracts which will be
awarded to successful bidders.
"These
contracts will include bidding obligations to ensure that the reduced
commercial risk of participating in the Capacity Investment Scheme is
passed on to consumers in the form of lower electricity prices.
"And there will also be availability obligations for gas generators which, if not met, will attract penalties."
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