Commentary

What’s really driving high power bills (hint, it’s not renewables) and how can we reduce them?

Published by

With the cost of living at front of mind for most Australians, it’s no surprise that the recent announcement of draft benchmark bill rises raised concerns.

To avoid bill rises, we must understand what is driving up the cost of electricity over the longer term, and the ways government, as well as households and businesses, can prevent or reduce increases in key cost buckets.

In its draft Default Market Offer (DMO), the Australian Energy Regulator (AER) laid out benchmark household power bill rises of between 5% and 8% for the 2025-26 financial year, and the Essential Services Commission released the Victorian Default Offer (VDO), which saw draft benchmark household bill rises of less than 1%. 

The increases in the DMO regions were largely driven by rises in the two largest components of an electricity bill: the wholesale costs, which are the costs of generating electricity; and the network costs, which are the costs of transporting electricity through the poles and wires. 

At Institute of Energy and Economic Financial Analysis (IEEFA) we examined the longer-term trends in wholesale and network costs components, to understand key drivers behind power bills and opportunities to reduce bills in a recent briefing note.

Research has shown that gas prices have historically been a key driver in wholesale electricity prices rises. According to Griffith University, the historical correlation between gas prices and electricity prices was 0.9 over 2012-2021 and gas prices influenced 50%-90% of pricing intervals in the NEM. More recent analysis by CEIG also highlighted the correlation between gas prices and electricity prices.

Recent outages at coal-fired power stations have also been driving up wholesale prices, as highlighted by AEMO in Q4 2024 and Baringa. When these power stations have outages – which occur more frequently as they age – more expensive gas-powered generation will often be used to fill the gap. 

Meanwhile, IEEFA analysis of prices over the years 2014-2024 has found that higher penetrations of renewable energy in the grid have historically been correlated with lower wholesale prices.

Renewable generators usually bid into the market at low prices due to their zero fuel cost and competitive strategy. If this pattern continues, introducing more wind and solar energy into the grid could put further downward pressure on wholesale spot prices. 

Our research also identified opportunities to put downward pressure on network costs by addressing electricity network supernormal profits and undertaking measures to reduce peak demand, or limit peak demand growth in the network. 

IEEFA’s research found that there is $15 billion of supernormal electricity network profits on top of $17.6 billion of normal, expected profit. Tightening the regulation of network businesses, to bring supernormal profits to reasonable levels could reduce the network component of customer bills. 

Moreover, it is important to consider how to drive efficiency in the distribution network, which makes up about 80% of network revenues each year.

Consumer-owned energy technologies that can reduce the maximum power demand in the network, like batteries, flexible hot water heating and smart air conditioners, could reduce network upgrade requirements to put downward pressure on network costs. 

Households and businesses can also reduce their consumption from the grid to reduce their bills. Simple upgrades such as replacing old, inefficient electric appliances with efficient ones, which can use a third of the power, would be a great start – along with better insulation and installing rooftop solar and storage. 

Together these measures could put downward pressure on power bills and provide much sought-after cost-of-living relief.

Johanna Bowyer is the lead analyst for Australian electricity at IEEFA.

About IEEFA: The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) examines issues related to energy markets, trends, and policies. The Institute’s mission is to accelerate the transition to a diverse, sustainable and profitable energy economy. (ieefa.org)

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

“Too complex, too hard, too often unfair:” Plan to reform electricity pricing backs contentious tariff changes

AEMC pushes ahead with a hotly contested recommendation to reform how network costs are recovered…

18 June 2026

We’re targeting 35 pct electrification in less than 10 years – but 35 pct of what?

The COP31 co-presidents had the idea right on global electrification targets. They got the measurement…

17 June 2026

Investors still “largely downbeat” about renewables, as policy and fossil risks overshadow rewards

Headline policy reform has not translated into improved investment conditions for renewables in Australia, a…

17 June 2026

“Pouring oil on climate fire:” Global fossil fuel use must halve by 2035 to avoid catastrophic climate damage

Global fossil fuel use must halve by 2035 and be phased out entirely by 2070…

17 June 2026

Must do better: Bowen seeks rule change to force energy retailers to do right thing by electricity customers

Federal energy minister seeks principles-based rule change to ensure retailers are doing more than just…

17 June 2026

Contested wind project pivots turbines and cuts footprint after discovering more endangered cycads

Wind farm developer has shaved 110 hectares off its footprint after working with EPBC planners…

17 June 2026