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Network Regulation Rule Change Proposals. AEMC Public Forum George Maltabarow Managing Director Ausgrid. I’ll talk about:. Role of the AEMC and the National Electricity Objective Experiences under the previous framework - and how it failed
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Network Regulation Rule Change Proposals AEMC Public Forum George Maltabarow Managing Director Ausgrid
I’ll talk about: Role of the AEMC and the National Electricity Objective Experiences under the previous framework - and how it failed Benefits of the new framework – examples of how it’s working Why Ausgrid believes the case for change has not been made.
National Electricity Objective & moving goal posts AEMC rightly focuses on: - efficiency - transparency - predictability - certainty Framework - Moving Goal Posts - Last two resets – two different sets of rules - Now a third set of rule changes proposed - Framework must be stable, mature, predictable
Network under-investment • Actual Capex • Replacement cost Catch-up expenditure Previous framework – under investment Unguided Regulators: IPART kept prices artificially low at the cost of the safety & reliability Actual capex vs assumed annual average annual cost of replacing network ($M, 2008-09 real)
Circuit Breaker Failures - Mason Park STSS Cracks in Circuit Breaker 132kV Air Blast Circuit Breaker Failure, Mason Park STSS, 2006
Hosing down North Sydney Zone The Sunday Telegraph, 17 October 2004, page 1
Major failures 132kV Transformer Bushing Failure, Milperra Zone, 2003 11kV Circuit Breaker Failure, Matraville Zone, 2001
Benefits of the framework Maintenance average unit costs reduced by approx 4% In 2005, 108 11 kV feeders overloaded. Now there are 44. 12% drop in no. of blackouts from equipment since 03/04. Average number of blackouts on rural power lines halved since 2003/04.
AER already has powers Information asymmetry - AER required more detailed information - now can’t use it - rule change not the answer Substitution Ausgrid (NSW)- AER cut: - $460M in capital funding, and - $360M in operating costs - Tribunal upheld AER’s decision