Worst Ever Great Idea: Australia IMPORTS LNG!

I have been talking about the absolutely stupid Government policy of gas supply, as a few big multinational companies continue to pump and export gas owned by Australia abroad, using energy from said gas sufficient to support Australian need, in order to liquidity it for export.

The stupidity stems from the lack of an east coast reservation approach (something which Western Australia has done well with a mandated domestic gas reservation policy and there energy prices are lower as a result), with exporters making massive profits (most of which do not hit Australian shores either) thanks to high international demand.

Australia does not have a physical shortage of gas so much as an artificial one, given most of the country’s supplies are exported via long-term contracts to lucrative markets in North Asia.

Gas has become a proxy fuel in two ways. First the marginal price of gas – which is roughly 5 times what it should be – drives the cost of electricity, which is also high – even after government support for households. In addition, the use of gas as a transition strategy despite its high contribution to the climate predicament we are in, blunts other more sustainable long term options. Gas is just as much a problem as oil and coal, a harmful fossil fuel that will doom the world to rising temperatures and ever more pollution.
But nevertheless here we are, because successive Governments appear under the thumb of big gas, and mumble on about Australia’s reputation risk if they acted in the interests of Australians!

The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) is forecasting that within just a few short years, supplies of gas on the east coast could fall well short of demand at peak times, typically in winter.

So now, for the first time, and in spite of Australia’s position as one of the world’s biggest gas exporters, the country is preparing to do something that was once unthinkable. The scene of the crime of a place I know well, Port Kembla in New South Wales, near Wollongong and about 100 k’s south of Sydney.

Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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