Consumers who choose to go off-grid will find it easier, safer and more reliable under reforms proposed today by the Australian Energy Market Commission (AEMC).
The Commission has published a draft framework that would require community groups, local councils, developers and other third party providers of stand-alone power systems to comply with jurisdictional regulations on reliability, safety and consumer protections, based on nationally agreed principles.
Microgrids and other types of off-grid power systems are becoming more viable options for some customers as the cost of technologies like rooftop solar and batteries continue to decline. While consumers can currently choose to go off-grid, in most cases they have very limited consumer protections.
The changes would enable those living in remote locations without easy access to the grid, or who wish to disconnect from the grid, to choose an off-grid solution while still having consumer protections in place for things like billing arrangements, reliability and safety standards.
The AEMC is recommending a tiered framework that provides appropriate consumer protections while avoiding unnecessary costs, rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.
The framework includes two main categories of systems:
- larger microgrids supplying anything from more than a few customers to many hundreds of customers, for example a microgrid supplying a small regional town, or a microgrid supplying a small isolated community
- smaller microgrids supplying a few customers, or supplying only large commercial and industrial customers, or an individual power system where there is a sale of energy. For example, a microgrid connecting two farms, or an individual power system where a retailer provides an ongoing energy supply to a customer for an ongoing charge.
For larger microgrids, jurisdictions would develop comprehensive regulations covering registration and licensing, obligations to supply and connect, pricing, consumer protections including for vulnerable customers, and reliability and safety standards. These bespoke regulations would fit the local circumstances but be based on national principles to minimise compliance costs for parties with operations in more than one state.
For smaller microgrids, lighter-touch regulation would apply with jurisdictions setting some minimum consumer protections, such as billing requirements, as well as basic requirements for safety, metering and technical standards.
Stakeholder feedback on the draft report is due by 8 August 2019.
Media: Prudence Anderson, Communication Director, 0404 821 935 or (02) 8296 7817
BACKGROUND
What is a stand-alone power system?
A stand-alone power system is an electricity supply arrangement that is not physically connected to the national grid. The term encompasses both microgrids and individual power systems:
- Microgrids: any system supplying multiple customers not physically connected to the grid. Includes anything from a large town to two farms connected to each other. Generation sources typically include solar PV, wind turbines and small scale gas generators and diesel engines.
- Individual power systems: a system supplying an individual customer not connected to the national grid or a microgrid. Typically includes a combination of solar PV, batteries and a back up generator.
Why is the AEMC doing this review?
Stand-alone power systems are generally not captured under the national electricity frameworks. Regulated distribution network service providers are currently prohibited from offering them to customers in most states and territories. If customers obtain their own supply using a stand-alone power system, those systems are subject to jurisdictional legislative frameworks that vary in their comprehensiveness.
Under the terms of reference for the review provided by the COAG Energy Council, the Commission is considering two priority areas:
- Priority 1 has focussed on the development of a national framework for customers that move from grid-connected supply to stand alone power systems provided by existing distribution network service providers. A final report was published on 30 May 2019 that set out a pathway to enable network businesses to transition remote customers to stand-alone power systems where it is cheaper than maintaining a connection to the grid, while providing customers with the same protections, reliability standards and their choice of retailer.
- Priority 2 (this report) is considering regulatory frameworks for the provision of stand-alone power systems by parties other than distribution network service providers. A final report for priority 2 is due by 31 October 2019.
Who are the market bodies?
AEMC - Australian Energy Market Commission is the rule maker, market developer and expert adviser to governments. It protects consumers and achieves the right trade-off between cost, reliability and security.
AEMO - Australian Energy Market Operator is the electricity and gas systems and market operator. It works with industry to keep the lights on.
AER - Australian Energy Regulator is the economic regulator in charge of rules compliance. It policies the system and monitors the market.