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I can manage my energy consumption

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Objectives

Many rental homes in Australia have the energy efficiency of a tent. This leads to higher energy costs, which add to cost-of-living pressures for renters. We don’t want to see an energy transition where only owner-occupiers can benefit. We need to have nationally consistent minimum energy efficiency standards, as well as a well communicated timeline for action that makes it clear to landlords that they will not be able to rent out poorly performing homes.

Consumers aren’t getting crucial information about the ongoing energy costs of the properties we want to buy or rent. We need better energy efficiency information about our single biggest purchase. Mandating disclosure provides vital information about how large the energy bills could be for someone thinking about renting it. It also provides critical information about the work required to bring that property up to a healthy and affordable standard for people thinking about buying it.

To ensure our homes and business premises are affordable, energy efficient and climate resilient, we’ll need to upgrade their energy efficiency. So we need a thorough understanding of what work needs to be undertaken to bring them up to scratch. However, most of us do not know which measures are the most impactful, or where to start. Small businesses, in particular, need a longer lead time to plan changes – and incentives that last longer than a year to enable them to act. We may not need to do everything all at once, but we do need to start doing something as soon as we can. 

The homes with the poorest levels of energy efficiency in Australia are also where those of us with the lowest incomes live. When these disadvantages intersect, they lead to large bills for those of us who can least afford to pay them. Given the harm caused to people’s health and financial wellbeing by energy inefficient homes, we should aim to fix the worst ones first. To make sure the energy transition leaves no one behind, we need to provide people with the help they need – including innovative support and financial incentives – to retrofit these homes. 

To minimise our bills, households and small businesses are being asked to improve the energy efficiency of our homes and premises, including investing in consumer energy resources and electrifying. However, the laws and rules ensuring we can seek remediation and redress when things go wrong sit with multiple entities, and often outside the scope of energy-specific rules and regulations, making it hard to get problems fixed. Why should we take action and adopt new technologies, even if they could benefit us, if we might suffer harm with no clear path for easy and free recourse?

There is a clear advantage for everyone if we reduce unnecessary energy consumption and, for those who can, shift usage to cheaper times of the day. All of this presupposes that we have access to real-time data that allows us to see the connection between our energy consumption and our bills. Currently access to this varies depending on our retailer, the state we live in, and the appliances we have. To our knowledge there has never been a landscape review of what tools and information are out there for consumers and who has access to them – and there’s no benchmark of what ‘good’ looks like. We plan to investigate.

Nine out of ten Australian households own a car, making electric vehicles likely the best opportunity most of us will have to participate in – and benefit from – the energy transition. Our research has shown that, even accounting for higher upfront costs for electric cars, we can expect to save more than $1,000 a year by 2030 from driving one. But we need to make sure that the infrastructure required to charge the millions of electric cars we’ll soon be driving will be available for those of us who live in apartments or don’t have off-street parking.

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Showing 1 - 9 of 40 results
Research
28 November 2017
2 min read
Power Shift: Driving Change (GEER review of the Low-Income Energy Efficiency Program)
Group of Energy Efficiency Researchers (GEER) Australia reviewed the Low-Income Energy Efficiency Program (LIEEP) - 20 pilots that trialled 44 initiatives to help low-income households manage their energy usage.
News
15 December 2017
2 min read
Webinar: Multiple Impacts of Household Energy Efficiency
Photo of a family of four in a kitchen. The two kids are chasing each other around a kitchen island while the parents look on. Everyone looks quite happy.
24 October 2018
Power Shift
Power Shift was a multi-year project that provides energy companies, government and regulators with evidence on which to build better-targeted, more effective and innovative energy management services and programs that deliver good outcomes for consumers.
News
19 December 2018
4 min read
Only 1 in 4 say their homes are energy efficient
Research
30 June 2019
2 min read
Scoping an effective voluntary industry guideline
AEF was engaged to develop an approach to an effective voluntary industry guideline to help households manage their energy usage and bills.
Young woman smiling at camera
Research
01 January 2020
3 min read
Power Shift: Targeting consumers
To be effective, assistance and information about energy use and energy efficiency must be delivered to consumers in a format and channel that suits the way they live. This project explores how to tailor information for different groups of consumers.
Research
01 January 2020
2 min read
Power Shift: Multiple Impacts Framework
Power Shift’s research indicates that helping people manage their energy has benefits far beyond reduced greenhouse gas emissions or cost savings to households.
Photo of a family sitting around a laptop on a couch; they're smiling at what is on the laptop and there is a lamp and plants in the background
Research
01 January 2020
4 min read
Power Shift: Evidence
Read the research reports and learn about the milestones that helped build the Power Shift evidence base.
Research
01 January 2020
2 min read
Power Shift: Opportunities for Innovation
A key focus of Power Shift was identifying the opportunities for market-led solutions.
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