Minority Report from the Australian Greens
Inquiry into Save Our Solar (Solar Rebate Protection) Bill 2008 [No. 2]
The Australian Greens:
- Believe that the Committee report
downplays the strong concerns expressed by the photovoltaic industry and gives
too much credence to the Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the
Arts data showing that rebate applications increased after the introduction of
the means test. This increase in demand is very likely to be a short-term
effect generated by the considerable media coverage surrounding the
introduction of the means test. Until then many would not have known that a
rebate existed.
- Share the Committee's concern
about the anecdotal evidence suggesting that the average size of the
installation has fallen since the introduction of the means test, thus
effectively increasing the money the Government spends per unit of installed
solar PV installed. We believe that the Committee Report should emphasise that
this is further evidence that the Government did not adequately assess the
implications of the means test prior to its introduction.
- Support the Save Our Solar Bill on
the basis that the administration of the Solar Homes and Communities Plan quite
clearly requires the scrutiny of the Senate. Further we consider the
Committee's objections to the Bill to be weak and motivated by politics rather than a
concern for good governance.
- Maintain our position that the
decision to means test the rebate should be immediately reversed and that the
Government should, by the next budget, commit to phasing in a national gross
feed-in tariff to replace the rebate. The most damaging effect of the means
test is that it reinforces the stop start stop nature of government support for
solar technology. A gross feed in tariff will provide the certainty that the
investment community needs and will facilitate business planning.
Senator Christine
Milne Senator Scott
Ludlam
Australian Greens Australian
Greens
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