Chapter 1 - Background
Referral and conduct of the inquiry
1.1
On 30 March
2006, the Senate referred the provisions of the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Amendment
Bill 2006 to the Environment, Communications, Information Technology and
the Arts (ECITA) Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 9 May 2006.
1.2
In accordance with its usual practice, the committee
advertised the inquiry in The Australian,
calling for submissions by Wednesday 19 April. The committee also directly
contacted a number of relevant organisations and individuals to invite
submissions.
1.3
Submissions were received from eight organisations and
individuals, as listed in Appendix 1.
Acknowledgments
1.4
The committee thanks all those who contributed to its inquiry
by preparing submissions. The committee is grateful to the Parliamentary
Library for its work in the Bills Digest, which assisted greatly in the committee's
work.
Notes on references in this report
1.5
References in this report are to individual submissions
as received by the committee rather than a bound volume of submissions.
Background to the bill
The Mandatory Renewable Energy Target (MRET)
1.6
In Australia
fossil fuels are the basis for the majority of the country's electricity
supply. The following 2004 figures provide a breakdown of electricity
generation (excluding non-grid private generation) by fuel type:
-
Black coal – 59.8 per cent
-
Brown coal – 25.7 per cent
-
Hydro – 7.2 per cent
-
Gas – 7.0 per cent
-
Oil and other – 0.3 per cent.[1]
1.7
Emissions from fossil fuels used in electricity
generation make up approximately one third of Australia's
total greenhouse emissions. In response to this, the Mandatory Renewable Energy
Target (MRET) was introduced as a greenhouse gas abatement measure. The MRET
has been designed to accelerate the uptake of renewable energy in grid-based
power applications, in turn reducing fossil fuel emissions. The MRET originally
established a target of 2% of renewable energy, which was later fixed at 9500
GWh, to be sourced by electricity retailers and other large electricity buyers
by 2010.[2]
1.8
The MRET is part of a suite of national greenhouse
response measures, Safeguarding the
Future: Australia's Response to Climate Change, announced by the Prime
Minister, the Hon. John Howard
MP, in November 1997.
The Renewable Energy (Electricity) Act 2000 (REEA)
1.9
The Renewable
Energy (Electricity) Act 2000 (the REEA) provides the legislative framework
for the MRET. The REEA is supported by the Renewable
Energy (Electricity) (Charge) Act 2000[3]
and the Renewable Energy (Electricity)
Regulations 2001. The Acts and regulations are administered by the Office
of the Renewable Energy Regulator (ORER).
1.10
Australian electricity retailers and other large buyers
of electricity (known as liable parties or entities) are required by the REEA
to collectively source an additional 9500 GWh of electricity from renewable
sources per annum by 2010. The amount contributed to the target by each liable
entity is determined on a proportional basis. The target of 9500 GWh is being
phased in up to 2010 with 9500 GWh per annum sustained from 2010 to 2020.[4] Interim annual targets have been set to
ensure there is consistent, incremental progress towards achieving the 2010
9500 GWh target.
1.11
Eligible renewable energy sources include: 'solar,
wind, ocean, wave and tidal, hydro, geothermal, biomass, specified wastes,
solar water heating, renewable stand alone power systems and renewable fuels
when co-fired with fossil fuels'.[5]
Renewable Energy Certificate
1.12
Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) are created by accredited
power stations that generate energy from renewable sources. Each certificate
corresponds to one megawatt hour (MWh) of renewable energy generated on top of
a baseline amount. RECs are tradeable; they can be bought and sold.
1.13
Under the REEA, liable parties must annually surrender
RECs to cover their required renewable energy purchases or pay a shortfall
charge of $40 per MWh.[6]
Office of the Renewable Energy Regulator
1.14
The Office of the Renewable Energy Regulator (ORER) was
established on 12 February 2001
to oversee the implementation of the MRET. ORER is a statutory authority under
the environment and heritage portfolio.
1.15
The principal responsibilities of the ORER are to:
-
accredit renewable energy power stations to
allow them to participate in the scheme;
-
oversee the creation and registration of valid
renewable energy certificates;
-
assess Annual Energy Acquisition Statements,
Renewable Energy Shortfall Statements and Annual Electricity Generation Returns;
-
impose any penalties for non-compliance within
the provisions of the legislation;
-
allow liable parties to redeem any renewable
energy shortfall charges if shortfalls are made up within three years; and
-
ensure the integrity of the measure by
undertaking audits of participants including renewable energy power stations,
agents and liable parties.[7]
The Energy Market Review[8]
1.16
In June 2001, COAG endorsed the need for a national
energy policy and agreed to commission an independent review of the strategic
directions for energy market reform in Australia
(the Energy Market Review). The Hon. Warwick R Parer, the chair of the review
panel, presented the report Towards a
Truly National and Efficient Energy Market to the Minister for Industry,
Tourism and Resources on 20 December
2002.
1.17
The key finding of the report was that serious energy
market deficiencies remain. It argued that these deficiencies must be promptly addressed
if Australia is
to achieve a 'genuinely national and efficient' energy market, particularly in
relation to the following areas of the industry:[9]
-
governance and regulation;
-
transmission and financial market development
(electricity); and
-
'upstream competition and barriers to the
construction of new pipelines' (gas).
1.18
The detailed findings of the report did not support the
expansion of, or an increase to, the MRET target. It commented that the MRET
scheme focuses too heavily on developing the renewable energy industry, rather
than on reducing both greenhouse emissions and energy consumption, and that in
its current form, it diverts investment away from 'more efficient carbon reducing
options'.[10]
1.19
In 2002, the government introduced into Parliament the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Amendment
Bill 2002. This bill was designed to implement changes to the list of
eligible renewable energy sources and establish significant new penalties. In
September 2002 the ECITA Legislation committee commenced an inquiry into the
provisions of the Renewable Energy
(Electricity) Amendment Bill 2002, and reported on them in December of that
year.
1.20
At the same time as the ECITA committee was concluding
its deliberations, a review of the Renewable
Energy (Electricity) Act was getting underway. This review was required by
the original legislation. The ECITA Legislation committee recommended that a number
of matters be referred for more detailed consideration by the legislation
review, whilst also suggesting:
-
changes to the definition of renewable energy
sources in section 17 of the REEA;[11]
-
inclusion of anti-gaming provisions; and[12]
-
consideration to be given at an appropriate time
to the possibility of raising the MRET.[13]
1.21
The bill lapsed in 2004.[14]
The Renewable Energy Act review[15]
1.22
Section 162 of the REEA requires the Minister for the
Environment and Heritage to commission an independent review of the operation
of the Act. It also outlines a range of issues that must be considered as part
of the review:
-
'extent to which the Act has contributed to
reducing greenhouse gas emissions;
-
extent to which the Act has encouraged
additional generation of electricity generated from renewable energy sources; and
-
mix of technologies that had resulted from the
implementation of the Act; and level of the overall target and interim target'.[16]
1.23
On 29
November 2002, the then Minister for the Environment and Heritage, Dr
David Kemp,
announced the commencement of preparations for the independent review. The MRET
review panel, chaired by the Hon Grant E J Tambling, was announced in March
2003 and the report, Renewable
Opportunities, A Review of the Operation of the Renewable Energy (Electricity)
Act 2000 (the Tambling Report), was presented in September 2003. The review
had the Bill and the submissions to the ECITA
committee before it, as well as seeking submissions of its own.
1.24
The review concluded that, at August 2003, MRET had contributed
substantially to additional renewable energy generation, with a total of 190
power stations accredited.[17] However, the
review made a number of recommendations to improve the efficiency and
transparency of the MRET scheme. It was further recommended that the MRET
scheme be extended from 2010 to 2020 with an increased target of 20 000 GWh to
be achieved by 2020. The review recommendations and the Government's response
to these recommendations are listed in Appendix 2.
1.25
The review supported several amendments to the REEA,
including many that were in the Renewable
Energy (Electricity) Amendment Bill 2002.
The Government's energy white paper
1.26
The Government released its Energy White Paper (EWP), Securing Australia's Energy Future, on 15 June 2004. The EWP outlined the
Government's strategy for Australia's
future energy development.
1.27
The EWP was developed by a whole-of-government Energy
Task Force that included members from the Department of Prime Minister and
Cabinet, the Department of the Treasury, the Department of the Environment and
Heritage, the Department of Transport and Regional Services, and the Department
of Industry, Tourism and Resources.[18]
1.28
The EWP explained that the Government's objectives are
to ensure that:
-
Australians have reliable access to competitively
priced energy;
-
the value of energy resources is optimised; and
-
environmental issues are well-managed.[19]
1.29
The EWP maintained that 'renewable energy will play an
important part in Australia's
long-term greenhouse response'.[20] However,
the EWP argued that to achieve this, it would be more effective to invest in
promoting the development of a broader range of low-emission technologies than
to increase the MRET.[21] Accordingly,
the Government's approach to renewable energy would involve:
-
the continuation of the MRET to 2020, without
any target increase; and
-
a commitment of $134 million to address barriers
impeding the uptake of renewable energy.[22]
Senate inquiry
1.30
On 24 June
2004 the Senate referred an inquiry into the budgetary and
environmental implications of the EWP to the Senate Environment,
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts References Committee. The committee
tabled its report[23] in May 2005.
1.31
As noted above, the review of the Renewable Energy
(Electricity) Act recommended that the timeframe of the MRET scheme be extended
from 2010 to 2020 with the target for renewable sources set at 20 000 GWh by
2020. Counter to this recommendation, the EWP stated that while the Government
would continue to support the MRET to 2020, the target would not be
increased.
1.32
The Senate report noted that the Government rejected
the review recommendation because it was believed that the expansion of the
MRET would 'impose significant economic costs through higher electricity
prices'.[24] The Government proposed alternative
measures to accelerate the uptake of renewable energy: the Renewable Energy
Development Initiative (REDI), Intermittent Energy Storage and Wind
Forecasting.
Outline of the bill
1.33
The Renewable
Energy (Electricity) Amendment Bill 2006 was introduced into the House of
Representatives on 2 March 2006.
The purpose of the bill is to implement the Government's agreed response to the
review of the Renewable Energy
(Electricity) Act 2000, which was conducted in 2003.
1.34
In his second reading speech the Parliamentary
Secretary to the Minister for the Environment and Heritage, the Hon.
Mr Gregory Hunt MP
noted that:
Following the 2003 review of the act, the government agreed to
make improvements to the legislation that enhance market transparency and
improve business certainty in the measure. The government also agreed to
increase opportunities for bioenergy and solar technologies, encourage
innovation through recognising emerging renewable electricity generation
technologies and make a range of administrative amendments to improve the effectiveness
and efficiency of operation of the scheme. This includes adopting provisions of
the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Amendment Bill 2002 that sought to improve the
administrative integrity, effectiveness and efficiency of the measure.[25]
1.35
The Government agreed to the majority of
recommendations in the review, which sought to improve the efficiency and
transparency of the MRET scheme (see Appendix 2). However, as noted above, the
Government did not agree to increase the MRET. Consequently, the bill does not
include amendments to the MRET target.
1.36
The explanatory memorandum states that the bill:
-
Sets time-limits for the creation of renewable
energy certificates and provides the opportunity to voluntarily surrender
certificates.
-
Provides for provisional accreditation of
proposed generation projects and establishes timeframes for determining the
eligibility of proposed projects.
-
Allows for the publication of additional data on
baselines and renewable electricity generation.
-
Clarifies the provisions and definitions in the
Act for Eligible Renewable Energy Sources and provides increased opportunities
for bioenergy.
-
Clarifies the provisions with respect to the
claiming of renewable energy certificates associated with solar water heaters and
small generation units.
-
Clarifies the provisions in relation to the
eligibility of solar water heaters and expedites the process by which
certificates can be claimed for new solar water heater models.
-
Allows for recent reforms in the National
Electricity Market and potential new market operators.
-
Clarifies the provisions in relation to a
relevant acquisition of electricity to ensure that only one entity is made
liable in relation to the purchase of a particular quantum of electricity.
-
Provides the Renewable Energy Regulator with the
power to vary a number of assessments and determinations under the Act
including the acquisition statement, the shortfall statement and baselines for
accredited power stations.
-
Provides the Renewable Energy Regulator with information
gathering powers to enable effective monitoring and compliance.
-
Allows for the suspension of an accredited power
station in certain circumstances – for example, where gaming is suspected.[26]
Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
1.37
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
provided commentary on the Renewable
Energy (Electricity) Amendment Bill 2006 on 29 March 2006.[27]
1.38
The committee has sought advice from the Minister on two
provisions of the bill:
-
Schedule 1, item 57 – the bill proposes to add a
new subsection to empower the regulator to make written determinations
regarding the number of renewable energy certificates able to be created for a
particular solar water heater installation. The committee has requested
clarification on whether the written determination would be legislative or
administrative in character.[28]
-
Schedule 1, item 100 – proposed new subsections
44(5), 44(6), 44(7) and 44(8) provide for the payment of a fee for the
surrender of renewable energy certificates within a period of 28 days from an
entity receiving a notice from the Regulator following the lodgement of an
energy acquisition statement. Proposed new subsection 44(9) declares that such
a notice is not a legislative instrument. The committee has requested
clarification on whether the proposed new subsection would be legislative in
character or declaratory only.[29]
1.39
The ECITA Legislation Committee notes the concerns
raised by the Scrutiny of Bills Committee, and expects that these matters will
be addressed through the minister's response.
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