House debates
Wednesday, 28 February 2018
Questions without Notice
Energy
2:25 pm
Josh Frydenberg (Kooyong, Liberal Party, Minister for the Environment and Energy) Share this | Hansard source
The changes to the energy supplement are still in Labor's costings. I'm glad we got a Dorothy Dixer on energy, because it's been more than 130 days since the member for Port Adelaide and Labor have asked a question on energy. Do you think that is because when Labor was last in office energy prices doubled? Then we got the carbon tax, the citizens' assembly and the cash for clunkers and we saw network prices skyrocket as the gold-plating took place.
The Leader of the Opposition has now asked for a national solution. He asked us to listen to the experts and he said that he wanted a bipartisan approach. But, when the Energy Security Board came forward with the National Energy Guarantee, which independent modelling shows will leave the average Australian household $300 a year better off than they would be under the Labor Party, he turns his back. Today, on the front page of The Australian Financial Review, we see Andrew Liveris, a proud Australian and the head of Dow Chemical—somebody who knows a thing or two about creating jobs, because he employs nearly 100,000 people—saying that the states need to get behind the National Energy Guarantee and that the Labor Party needs to get behind the National Energy Guarantee as a means of creating jobs and investment certainty. The other thing that Andrew Liveris says is that it is time to stop those blanket bans and moratoriums on gas development that you see across Labor states. In the state of Victoria, Daniel Andrews is not only locking up unconventional gas, he is also locking up on-shore conventional gas.
A government member: What does that mean for gas prices?
Higher prices.
Ms Butler interjecting—
There is 40 years worth of supply in Victoria being locked up by a Labor government. It all goes to energy prices.
Ms Butler interjecting—
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