Energy retailers cash in and send customer bills soaring as coal plants fail again
18 Jul 2024
Two of Australia’s biggest
utilities and retailers have been accused by the energy market regulator of
seeking to “maximise profits” over the last two months as they sought to cash
in on tight market conditions caused by the failure of some of the country’s
ageing coal assets.
Prices
soared in May and June, mostly due to unplanned outages at coal plants,
multiple trips at the country’s biggest coal generator at Eraring and the
nearby Vales Point, and technical issues that reduced capacity at Eraring,
Vales Point, and Bayswater.
The
situation was worsened by major network constraints that limited supplies
coming from competitors interstate and renewables in the south-west of NSW,
along with the inability of some units, such as Snowy Hydro’s Colongra peaking
gas plant, to do what it is supposed to do and respond quickly to such events.
That left the big players in control of the market and – despite their repeated
protestations that consumers are really important and the heart of their
business – they immediately cashed in on the situation.
“While
rebidding to maximise profits is permissible under the National Electricity
Rules, the behaviour may not have been in the best interests of energy
consumers,” the AER noted in a newly released compliance report.
This
behaviour is not uncommon. Energy giants have been pushing prices to the market
caps on repeated occasions whenever the opportunity emerges, even thought the
asking price has nothing to do with the cost of generation.
At
times, particularly in the fossil-fuel driven and largely fabricated energy
crisis in 2022, they drove up prices so high the market had to be suspended.
And here they were doing it again – the administrative price cap was in force
for a week in May, essentially to protect consumers from further price gouging.
Renew
Economy has been banging on about this for years. At least the Australian
Energy Regulator is starting to show it notices, and perhaps even cares, not
that there is much evidence it can or will do much about it.
The
AER report on the events in May – when prices jumped repeatedly above the
$5,000 a megawatt hour threshold that triggers a compulsory investigation –
appears to go further than previous reports in digging into exactly what
happened, and how the big gentailers helped engineer the price spikes.
The
AER report observes that normally the output of the big coal plants is bid at
low prices, to ensure they are dispatched because the coal plants do not like
to be forced to ramp up and down.
But
in May, the AFR notes, when up to 2,500 MW of coal capacity was sidelined by
trips and technical faults, big players like AGL Energy and EnergyAustralia
repeatedly boosted the asking price for significant amounts of the output from
their Bayswater and Mt Piper coal plants above $5,000 MWh – (about 50 times the
actual cost of generation).
“AGL
offered a higher proportion of Bayswater’s capacity at or near the price cap
from 2 May (the first high-priced day) when compared to the previous week,” the
AER noted.
“On
7, 8 and 20 May, for example, it offered near 30% of Bayswater’s capacity at or
near the price cap. Similarly, EA offered Mt Piper’s capacity above $5,000 per
MWh for a small window around 6 pm from 2 May onwards. On 8 May, it offered 35%
of Mt Piper’s capacity at or near the price cap.
“This
offer behaviour represents quite a contrast with offer behaviour of the
previous week when all station capacity was offered below $5,000 per MWh across
the evening peaks.”
That
wasn’t the only thing going on. The wholesale price at any given time is set by
the price of the last megawatt into the market. If that megawatt of power is
priced at, say, $500/MWh, then every megawatt produced at that time – and there
could be thirty thousand of them – receive that same price.
Only
one megawatt is needed to change those prices. And one of the great mysteries
of the market – well, not a mystery at all really – is the sudden disappearance
of low priced capacity from the market offers, forcing the price into those
higher band.
This
happened in May. Repeatedly. The AER notes that the inability to ramp up capacity
quickly enough helped push prices beyond the $5,000 MWh on four separate days.
On
May 3, it noted, some 244 MW of low priced capacity could not be dispatched. If
just 30 MW had reached the market, then it would have avoided high prices.
The
AER says all three of the country’s big gentailers – AGL, EnergyAustralia and
Origin Energy offered their capacity at ramp rates that were at or close to the
very minimum allowed by the market operator.
No
explanation of why that was so was provided. But you could hazard a guess. “If
the unit ramp rates were near their
maximum or accurately reflected their technical ability, high prices on 3 May
and two further 30-minute intervals (one on 7 and 8 May) would likely not have
occurred,” the AER said.
To be
fair, they were not the only offenders. Queensland’s state owned CS Energy
rebid capacity at its Gladstone coal unit, Alinta did the same at its Braemer
gas plant, and AGL and Genex did the same with their Wandoan and Bouldercombe
batteries respectively.
In
the latter two cases, just a single megawatt of repriced capacity was enough to
push prices into a higher price band.
All
this means, of course, that consumers will take a hit. The activities and
bidding tactics of the big gentailers resulted in high wholesale prices, which
will be used by them as an argument to push up retail bills next year. And it
also had an impact on the futures market, possibly locking in those high prices
and the impact on consumers for longer.
“There
has been a general uplift in forward prices across all forward quarters and
retailers entering into contracts in the future will require these elevated
contracts,” the AER wrote. “Retailers are likely to reflect their increased
cost to buy electricity in future contracts with consumers.”
But
finally, it seems, the AER is making clear it is seeing what is going on.
“However, the AER sets a maximum price that retailers can charge electricity
consumers through the Default Market Offer,” it wrote.
It
remains to be seen what levels of control the AER can exercise over this
behaviour and the prices for the next default market offer. But there is a
deeper, more troubling issue here.
The
big gentailers have done sweet F.A. in the general scheme of things to ensure
that enough new wind, solar and storage capacity has been built to replace the
coal fired generators that they know are ageing and getting increasingly
decrepit.
Yes,
they are making all the right noises now. But they have used this delay to
preside over rising prices, and extract money from governments fearful of
potential blackouts and yet more price spikes to keep those coal generators
running longer.
That’s
bad enough, but a large part of the green energy transition will be delivered
through what happens in the home and the business, and the decisions made by
consumers on items such as rooftop solar, battery storage, electric vehicles,
heat pumps and other appliances.
The
big legacy generators and retailers want the public to believe that they should
be “trusted” to enter the home and help orchestrate those appliances and
consumer assets.
They
want the public to believe that they have the interests of consumers at heart.
Yet there is absolutely nothing in their day to day behaviour that should cause
anyone to believe a single word they are saying. And that is not good.