Alinta Energy chief executive Jeff Dimery said politicians’ management of the cost-of-living “crisis” will largely determine a looming federal election as the electricity giant warned the eventual closure of coal plants will trigger a hike in power prices.
Ahead of the Reserve Bank’s Tuesday decision on interest rate cuts, Australia’s fourth largest electricity retailer has weighed into concerns over the economy and predicted a household cash crunch will influence voters at the polling booth.
The election “will be determined in large part by who the electorate feels can best manage through and out of a cost-of-living crisis”, Mr Dimery said in a LinkedIn post.
The Alinta boss delivered a series of “truths and straight talking” comments in April 2024, declaring Australians face higher bills as the country struggles to build adequate replacements for coal with soaring costs for new sources of green power and transmission.
The speech inflamed tensions with the Labor government, which came to power promising to cut electricity prices by $275 a year.
The owner of the Loy Yang B coal power station in Victoria, which supplies 20 per cent of the state’s energy needs, repeated the warning on Monday as fears grow over a botched transition to renewables from coal.
”What else can be done to meliorate the situation and bring down pressure on household utility bills,” Mr Dimery said.
While Alinta’s Loy Yang B station may remain open until 2047, both the neighbouring Loy Yang A plant and EnergyAustralia’s Yallourn facility will close in the next decade.
“These issues must be identified and resolved before the closure of low marginal cost brown coal assets such as Yallourn and Loy Yang A. One thing is certain, these announced closures will invariably put upward pressure on the $45 per megawatt hour average wholesale pool pricing outcome we ‘enjoy’ today.”