Gas

Australia reached peak gas years ago, but it needs a ban on new home connections, and plans for a faster exit

Published by

Australia must start preparing for life after gas or risk bill hikes, missed climate targets and manufacturers shutting up shop, warns a prominent think tank.

Bans on new household gas connections, reworked green hydrogen incentives and a windfall profit tax on the export industry feature in the Grattan Institute’s extensive report on Australia’s deteriorating relationship with the fuel.

The think tank says demand for both domestic and exported liquefied natural gas (LNG) product is projected to decline.

It argues an even faster drop off will be needed than implied by the federal government’s gas strategy projections to meet Australia’s international climate commitments, including net zero by 2050.

Burning gas to cook food, manufacture goods and generate electricity releases greenhouse gas emissions but so does getting it out of the ground and processing it, together amounting to roughly 20 per cent of Australia’s carbon pollution.

Australia’s Future Gas Strategy implies net zero can be reached while gas production and use stay elevated beyond 2050.

Such a scenario would rely on far more renewable gases, widespread use of carbon capture and storage, and large volumes of carbon removals, solutions that “are unlikely to be available in the volumes required at prices people are willing to pay”.

Households are already turning away from gas, with demand peaking in 2020 and declining 16 per cent since.

Bans on new gas connections and incentives for landlords to swap in electric appliances are recommended to keep electrification going, as well as careful management of the network “death spiral”.

Recognising electrification leaves behind a shrinking pool of customers covering the cost of the pipes moving gas around, the case is made for clamping down on new spending and splitting the costs of decommissioning the network fairly.

Governments nervous of strong gas phase-out signals are warned consumers that do not have are realistic opportunities to electrify will be left paying more for the benefit of a few diehards.

Consumers who really want to use gas should be nudged towards using Liquid Petroleum Gas (LPG), as used in some regional and rural areas already.

“This would mean they take full responsibility for their choice, by handling their own supply instead of relying on a network where their choice is cross-subsidised by those who can least afford it,” the report said.

The case is also made for a reset on renewable fuels industry policy, including repurposing hydrogen production tax incentives for smaller grants and loans in recognition the sector is still fledgling and lacks scaled demand.

Australia also needs to get the market settings right to ensure it has enough gas-powered generation capacity and to maximise the benefits of the LNG export sector, including a tougher tax regime and an effective domestic reservation scheme.

Source: AAP

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Game changer for EVs? Australian battery pioneer lands $45m grant for silicon anode that boosts energy density

An Australian battery technology pioneer has landed a major government grant to start commercial production…

28 June 2026

“I didn’t notice:” Homeowners using solar, batteries and V2G to stay connected in blackouts

Could your electric car do more than just keep the lights on in an emergency?…

28 June 2026

Swiss commodity trader gets approval to buy Zen retail business and PPA deals. Will it take on Big 3?

One of the world's biggest commodity traders moves into Australia electricity retail business - competition…

26 June 2026

Judge dismisses legal bid to prevent gas fracking in the Top End

Activists have lost their court bid to prevent gas exploration in the Northern Territory after…

26 June 2026

Nuclear reactors taken offline in France, as extreme heat pushes river temperatures into danger zone

EDF has taken nearly 10% of its nuclear power capacity offline this week, to avoid…

26 June 2026

South Australia swings from three days of 100 pct renewables to worst drought in 7 years

South Australia just experienced its worst wind drought in seven years. The fleet of short-duration…

26 June 2026