Type
Sector
Electricity
Gas
Segment
Consumer matters
Corporate
Distribution
Retail
Transmission
Wholesale
Issue date
AER reference
NR 27/21
Contacts

The Australian Energy Regulator (AER) is extending short-term, additional protections for households and small businesses in New South Wales local government areas already impacted by COVID-19 lockdowns to Dubbo from 1pm today.

These protections are already in place for Greater Sydney, Newcastle, Lake Macquarie, Maitland, Port Stephens, Cessnock, Dungog, Singleton, Muswellbrook, Armidale, Tamworth, Byron Shire, Richmond Valley, Lismore, and Ballina Shire. 

The AER recently developed a standby Statement of Expectations for energy retailers in the event jurisdictions are subject to extended stay-at-home orders.

The AER will apply the standby Statement in local government areas where stay at home orders are imposed for a period of 7 days or more.

The standby Statement principles will provide additional protections for residential and small business customers in these local government areas until two weeks after the stay-at-home order ends.

The standby Statement expects retailers to:

  1. Offer all residential and small business consumers who indicate they may be in financial stress a payment plan or hardship arrangement;
  2. Not disconnect any residential or small business consumers who may be in financial stress (including residential and small business consumers in an embedded network) without their agreement;
  3. Defer referrals of residential and small business consumers to debt collection agencies for recovery actions or credit default listing.

The AER is ready to respond by providing the additional protections in other areas that may be impacted by the evolving health events and further stay-at-home orders.

The AER will continue to monitor the rapidly changing situation across all National Energy Customer Framework (NECF) jurisdictions.

The standby Statement of Expectations is applied at the AER’s discretion to NECF jurisdictions - the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia or Tasmania.

Victorian energy consumers come under the separate protections of the Essential Services Commission, while Western Australia and the Northern Territory have their own separate retail energy market regulation.

Consumers can shop around for a better energy deal through the AER’s Energy Made Easy website, which offers a free energy price comparison service for households and small businesses.