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Reading: Gas exports are driving up Australia’s electricity prices
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Gas exports are driving up Australia’s electricity prices

Last updated: February 19, 2026 4:50 am
Published: 1 month ago
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South Australians have seen huge spikes in their power bills, but not because of renewables or wind turbines, writes David McIlveen.

SOUTH AUSTRALIA suffered through an extraordinary heatwave in January, and on top of the heat stress, energy demand in the evenings and electricity costs for South Australians rocketed upwards, along with the temperature.

Never missing an opportunity to stoke renewables alarmism and spread disinformation, the Murdoch media was quick to jump on South Australia.

Some “energy commentator” on Sky News sneered:

“It was their own damn fault for building so many wind turbines!”

It’s a familiar claim in the discredited, compromised commercial press: contrary to all evidence and even intuition, renewables are secretly very expensive. Ideologically-minded groups and individuals will never miss an opportunity to blame renewables for power bills, but sneering and tilting at windmills only gets one so far. You won’t get the whole picture, nor an especially accurate one, if you listen to the commercial press.

Power to the people: Rewiring Australia’s energy future

Australia’s energy future won’t be built by corporations alone, it’ll be co-created by communities, technology and trust.

The situation in South Australia does, however, prompt the very reasonable question: with all that abundant low-cost renewable energy in the state, and increasingly across other states, how do electricity prices get so high?

The context provided by Giles Parkinson, writing in Renew Economy, is a good starting point. But furthermore, the overpaid non-experts in the commercial media would do well to recall that the price of electricity in Australia correlates closely with the export price of gas (in all states, including South Australia, despite the makeup of renewables, with the exception of WA, however, as the situation there is a little different). This is something that often gets overlooked, missed or deliberately ignored. And it shouldn’t.

To understand how gas drives electricity prices up, the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) explains:

Historically, research has shown that as gas prices rise, electricity prices have also risen. Gas is one of the most expensive forms of electricity generation in the market. As the bidding behaviours of gas generators affect other generators, the cost of gas has a disproportionate effect on power prices.

In fact, researchers at Griffith University found that gas prices drove 50-90% of pricing periods in the NEM (National Electricity Market) from 2012 to 2021, directly and indirectly.

The Link: Gas generators often act as the “marginal generator,” setting the spot price for electricity. When gas prices rise — driven by linkage to high international LNG export prices — electricity prices follow, regardless of the underlying supply-demand balance.

…Over the past decade, the start of LNG exports in Queensland has caused domestic gas prices to surge, resulting in a 73% increase in average wholesale electricity prices.

So, the price of gas serves as a key driver of wholesale electricity costs in Australia. The mechanisms behind this are a little complex, but there are good explainers online (here’s a detailed one from the RBA website), that illustrate how the national electricity market works, and the AEMO, and the related, poor policy decisions of the past that have led to us paying through the nose (“export price parity”) to a few multinational, foreign-owned companies for our own gas, and hence, for electricity.

This article from the ABC, published December of last year, gives a bit of the policy history. (And here is Martin Ferguson joining gas lobby group APPEA in 2013, within 6 months of finishing up as federal resources minister, having helped scuttle any form of domestic gas reservation at the behest of the gas lobby).

Letting global gas markets effectively determine the price we pay for electricity was a policy choice, the result of political capture and the complicity of Australia’s commercial media (who’ve uncritically published and promoted gas industry-sponsored articles, press releases and the claims of gas industry PR reps over the years). We know gas companies are some of the biggest donors to both major parties — collectively, they donate hundreds of thousands of dollars per election cycle.

And that’s just power generation, not touching on the issues of the retailers and network owners.

So while the commercial press has been spreading disinformation and distracting the general public with inane debates around whether windmills are “woke” or not, and a bunch of louts and yobbos in Parliament think fighting against solar panels and wind turbines is the greatest cultural and moral crusade of their lives, it appears we’ve all been price gouged for over a decade now by a gas cartel that invests (“donates”) huge sums in the major parties, and gets rewarded with a fantastic return on investment, in having the interests of the entire Australian economy made subservient to the interests of a handful of (largely foreign-owned) multinational gas companies, supplying Asia ahead of Australia.

Australia facing looming power shortage crisis in 2027

Strategies are urgently needed to prevent an impending power shortage crisis, including ramping up reliance on renewable energy.

Apart from higher energy bills for consumers, expensive energy has, as we all know, huge ramifications for the economy, not least our ability to advance our domestic manufacturing and refining and processing capacity, which is becoming increasingly crucial, and which, in turn, has implications for our national security and even sovereignty. Not that Woodside, Shell or Chevron would care much about that.

It pays to be relentlessly curious, sceptical, and inquisitive, and to never rely on the commercial media, which, as we know now from long experience, simply can’t be trusted to prioritise the public interest over the private when it really matters.

David McIlveen studied science and environmental engineering at the University of Queensland and now works as an environmental consultant in Brisbane.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Australia License

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