Victorian government seeks $500m chunk of state electricity market under new Premier Jacinta Allan

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Victoria’s new Premier Jacinta Allan has set the revived State Electricity Commission the task of grabbing a chunk of the Victorian energy market that could be worth as much as $500 million a year from existing retailers.

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The expanded remit for the SEC drew a sceptical response from energy users, experts and retailers. Andrew Richards, head of the Energy Users Association of Victoria, whose members include BHP, Tomago Aluminium, Alcoa, Shell, Asahi, Coles and BlueScope Steel, said, “on the surface more competition is a good thing and if they are able to arrange contracts for firm clean supply it would be a good outcome”.

, which Labor won with an increased majority, and now involves a more substantial reversal of the electricity sector privatisation started by the Kennett government in the 1990s. Grattan Institute energy program director Tony Wood said the SEC was supposed to be a commercial organisation committed to “competitive neutrality”, so “why on earth would they do something the private sector wouldn’t do?”

Sarah McNamara, head of the Australian Energy Council which represents large retailers, said: “Today’s announcement will see the SEC competing with the broad range of government and privately owned entities currently selling electricity to large customers in Victoria.

 

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