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Blackouts Bull S. short circuited (Read 1322 times)
juliar
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Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Sep 8th, 2017 at 10:59am
 
The local Lefties must be really proud of their hero Bull S.

They had to use a shovel to clear away the bulldust oozing out of Bull S.




Bill Shorten’s power play debunked
The Australian 12:00AM September 8, 2017

...
What a flamin' goose!!!!!

Bill Shorten’s claim that the electricity crisis has been driven by privatisation has been dismissed by business leaders and energy experts, and prompted accu­sations from a former NSW Labor treasurer that the Opposition Leader is abandoning the Keating government reform agenda.

Former Business Council of Australia president and 2014 ­National Commission of Audit chairman Tony Shepherd dismissed Mr Shorten’s attack on private-sector energy companies, declaring that the crisis was “not a failure of markets” but “a failure of governments’’.

The nation’s energy regulator this week called for the creation of a power reserve to prevent the heightened risk of blackouts and brownouts this summer in Vic­toria and South Australia and the potential for power shortfalls in NSW if the AGL-owned Liddell coal-fired station is shut, as scheduled, in 2022.

Rising electricity and gas ­prices have sparked warnings from leading companies that jobs and investment will be threatened and costs will be passed on to consumers through higher prices.

Mr Shorten used an ABC radio interview to argue that the privatisation of electricity assets in the 1990s had seen the nation lose control of prices and to claim that a “ruthless pursuit of profits’’ by energy companies was hurting the nation.

“There is no doubt that privatisation has been a big problem and I think the debate in Australia needs to recognise that,’’ he said.

Former NSW Labor treasurer Michael Costa, who resigned his position in 2008 when he and then premier Morris Iemma failed in their bid to privatise the NSW electricity generators and retailers in the face of trade union opposition, accused Mr Shorten of “ignorance’’ and abandoning Labor’s blue-collar base.

“Bill Shorten doesn’t understand electricity markets or markets in general … prices reflect the distortions that governments have created,’’ Mr Costa said.

“Bill should remember the electricity market reforms were started by the Keating government. He is sounding more and more like a left-wing socialist ideologue. Labor’s 50 per cent renewable energy target is a further betrayal of blue-collar workers and will lead to the deindustrialisation of Australia.’’

Mr Shepherd told The Australian the electricity market was set up on a basis that had “no recognition of the capacity to deliver power consistently”, so the rise of renewable energy had made coal and gas less competitive. This had resulted in less investment in coal and gas generation and a “steady decline in baseload capacity”.

“Unfortunately these market arrangements had led to a doubling of the cost of electricity for the average consumer and serious ­issues in their reliability and availability,” Mr Shepherd said.

“The solution is not renationalisation but correction of the fundamental flaws in the market and the market rules as established.”

Former Victorian premier Jeff Kennett said Mr Shorten had proved he was “yesterday’s man, with yesterday’s ideas and he has absolutely no relevance to Australia in 2017, and sadly he has absolutely no relevance for Aus­tralia into the future’’.

Mr Shorten last week singled out Victoria as an example where privatisation had failed. “What happened is that these electricity generators were sold at a very high one-off price and the private operators, ever since then, have been basically trying to screw down costs and bleed these assets to recoup some of the money they paid for it,” Mr Shorten said.

“So I think the privatisation has been a net-negative in electrical generation and I think that we’re seeing some of the problems with privatisation come home to roost in 2017.”

Mr Kennett, who privatised Victoria’s electricity assets in the 1990s, slammed Mr Shorten’s “ignorant” claim that electricity privatisation was a failure, declaring it showed the Labor leader was “totally incapable” of leading Australia.

“It is not that privatisation was wrong; it is the failure of governments since then to work with the private sector to develop an industry that was going to meet the needs of the Australian community,” Mr Kennett said.

Electrical Trades Union NSW secretary Dave McKinley backed Mr Shorten’s attack on privatisation, declaring it had “failed the people of Australia” and resulted in “higher prices and a loss of control over an essential service”.

ACTU president Ged Kearney took to Twitter to back Mr Shorten’s call for a debate on the privatisation of electricity assets. “Privatisation was a big mistake — and still is! We definitely need a conversation about it,” she said.

Be enthralled with the piles of bulldust leaking out of Bull S. continued overleaf
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juliar
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #1 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 10:59am
 
Be enthralled with the piles of bulldust leaking out of Bull S. continued


ACTU secretary Sally McManus said privatisation had been a major contributor to the cost of living for working people by pushing up power bills. “We are really worried about the issue of energy,” she told Sky News.

“We think it’s affecting workers’ living standards. Privatisation has been a really big contributor to rising energy costs on everyone, on working people.”

In a statement, the Business Council of Australia said the energy crisis was the result of “government policy failures, not industry decisions”.

“Australia’s energy sector has been subjected to numerous haphazard government interventions including overlapping state and federal renewable energy targets, a poorly designed carbon tax, and state moratoria on developing gas reserves that have thrown scientific advice out the window,” the BCA said.

Grattan Institute energy director Tony Wood rejected privatisation as the cause of the energy market crisis. He said 15 years of political disagreement on climate change policy and regulated monopolies in the electricity distribution networks were contributors to the current electricity crisis. He also pointed to the fact that in Queensland, the Palaszczuk government in June was forced to order its state-owned power generator Stanwell to pursue lower profits during heatwaves because of spikes in power prices.

Additional reporting: Brad Norington, Greg Brown, Sarah Elks, Sid Maher

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/mining-energy/bill-shortens-power-play-...


And just to give the lefties a thrill some REAL COMMENTS and not dog's breakfast

Dermot 27 minutes ago
"Bill Shorten doesn't understand electricity market or markets in general" says it all. No commercial sense and no common sense from the PM in waiting. Of course his trade union toadies and supporters are firmly on board his band wagon. What a huge mess waiting just around the corner. BS a man who has never created one job supported by morons intent on destroying jobs. God help us!

Richard 32 minutes ago
Shorten has stated that he would run Australia like he ran the union. One needs no better proof in this than what's reflected in the column. His union mates are all joined at the hip with him.

Martin 39 minutes ago
Bill Shorten has just joined he "Basket Cases' such as South Australia and Victoria. The man is an utter fool  !!

craig 39 minutes ago
The climate change headlong rush to renewables with no strategic long term plans of sensible and economic rationality is killing Australia while countries like China & India continue on their merry way gorging themselves with our coal & gas to their hearts content whilst we stupidly embrace ourselves with stupidity.

Gordon 42 minutes ago
Labour know they are vulnerable on energy so are making this pre-emotive attack to shift the blame to the nasty capitalist system rather than admit that their insane policies have produced this mess

David 43 minutes ago
Dan Andrews increased the royalties on coal by 300% so the owners shut Hazelwood down. Hazelwood still had 20 years left in it according to an ex CEO. How can business survive with these stupid labour governments.

Forne 48 minutes ago
Malcolm Turnbull and his Ministers have wiped the floor in Parliament with Bill Shorten this week but MSM will not report that.  Shorten has had a very bad week again that will not be reported if it was Abbott or Turnbull it would be headlines.   Australia has the cleanest coal in the world we export huge quantities of it keeping coal fired power stations operating until a cheaper and more reliable source of renewable power that can the lights of the nation on is common sense.  There that is it "common sense" never gone hand in hand with Labor too simple for them to grasp.  More and more manufacturers will go overseas more jobs lost  if we don't get our power sorted.

:T: 49 minutes ago
“Bill Shorten doesn’t understand electricity markets or markets in general"
And therein lies the problem. Bill Shorten is yet another Labor amateur who thinks that being clever at political manipulation is all you need to be a good PM. His lack of practical experience is alarming and we have every reason to believe that he would be a disaster along the lines of Rudd and Gillard.
This country deserves far better than this.

dominic 49 minutes ago
Is it a reflection on us that someone as duplicitous as Bill Shorten can survive in the top spot for so long? Actively involved in the worst government I have seen in my life time, implicit in the executing two sitting PMs, vacillating on issues like SSM and energy production, constantly trying to read his virtual weather vain in order to blow with any days rating public opinions. The very opposite to what is needed in strong leaders. Like a slippery character out of Game of Thrones. Little Finger maybe?
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juliar
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #2 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 11:16am
 
Gee the floor at parliament must be spotless with Malcolm repeatedly wiping the floor with Bull S.

Has Bull S. short circuited his silly weak emasculated self and given Mal a nice boost ?

It will be hilarious when the pro Libs Hi Court clears all the Libs straight away and keeps the many Labor duals in suspense until the election!!!!





Blackout Bill Shorten could give Turnbull the energy boost he needs
The Australian 12:00AM September 8, 2017

...
Bull S. singing Solidarity Forever!!!!

The High Court is now front and center in the politics of our country. Two decisions will have profound, far-reaching effects on the status of the government and Malcolm Turnbull. Mostly, as High Court decisions come and go, few of us notice or care. Suddenly all eyes, not to mention cameras and microphones, are trained on the court’s Melbourne building.

We must all wait for a month or two yet for the High Court to decide who should be taking their seats in the Australian parliament and who should be declared as ­improperly elected and forced to walk the plank. A growing number of MPs and senators has been referred to the High Court for this crucial determination. Most are in the Senate and can be replaced with little drama by the next person on their party ticket. Australia has recently witnessed the seamless replacement of two senators. Bob Day from South Australia and Rod Culleton from the West were replaced by the next on their party’s list without the slightest hint of drama or the spending of one useless dollar.

On the other decision just made by the High Court — to allow the government to proceed with the postal survey — we are guaranteed to spend more than $100 million. And we need not have had parliament simply done its job and voted on the issue.

The High Court’s decision was not what most academic lawyers thought would happen and it must have stunned the QCs, SCs and lawyers to whom I spoke earlier. Almost every one of them ­assured me the government would lose. Its policy, which was taken to the election, was to hold a real plebiscite, not a half-baked survey, after the next election in about two years. Now we have a ruling that parliamentary endorse­ment of the expenditure of $122m is urgent.

The decision was a huge relief for the Prime Minister. He was told during question time of his victory in the High Court and his demeanour changed immediately. There was a new spring in his step and during an answer on energy reliability he finally came close to acting like a real leader. In the midst of a fairly standard spray on the opposition, he actually came up with an Abbott-like pithy, effective line. He referred to Labor as the party of blackouts. ­Finally, he hit a nail on the head.

The one ray of light offered to his faltering leadership has been Labor’s truly awful energy policies. Under Mark Butler, Labor’s spokesman on energy, the opposition has walked further and further out on the ­renewables limb. There is now a virtual guarantee of more blackouts in South Australia (Butler’s home state) over the summer and a strong probability of blackouts in Victoria. Turnbull will have a really effective campaign pre­sented to him on a Labor-provided platter.

The energy policy in South Australia shows the folly of chasing the wonderful goal of ­renewable sources providing all of our power needs without waiting for the proven technology that would make that goal possible.

Between now and the federal election, Turnbull must make the blackout label stick to Labor. At a time when the Coalition would be flat out trying to convince the electorate there were real differences between it and the opposition — particularly given the growing number of disillusioned, disgruntled voters who simply wish that a plague would envelop the major parties — energy policy is simply Turnbull’s only hope.

I interviewed Newspoll boss David Briggs on my Sky News show on Wednesday night. Naturally you are always gratified when someone as knowledgeable as him backs your opinion.

Much was made by the media and the commentariat about the gap ­between the PM and Bill Shorten continuing to grow as demonstrated in Monday’s Newspoll. My view has been that this is — at present — the poll number on which I put the least value. That is because the punters don’t like ­either of them. If there was a visionary, charismatic leader in the race, they would be ­unbackable. Sadly no one even ­remotely resembling that description is about — they haven’t been for a decade.

The only way the Coalition can ensure that its primary vote goes back to 40 per cent or more is to find a point of difference on a policy that matters to voters. There is no more important issue to every segment of Australian society than the reliability of electricity supply and the price paid for it.

On the economy, Labor has been cautious and has presented a small target to a government hamstrung by its utter failure to rein in spending. Well directed by opposition Treasury spokesman Chris Bowen, the debate over who is the better economic manager has been pretty much a draw and that is the best Labor can hope for.

The damnation of Bull S. continues overleaf
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juliar
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #3 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 11:16am
 
The damnation of Bull S. continues...


Having wimped out of being the champion of small business by taking on the penalty rates issue, out there in the real world they just can’t see reason to vote for or to vote against either side of politics.

My advice to Turnbull, which by the way he tends to studiously avoid following, is to buy into the coal debate with gusto. When he answered the question to which I earlier referred, I was encouraged that the PM attacked Labor for going too far along the renewables road and ignoring coal-fired power.

There is an elitist cruelty about Labor’s energy policy. By not seeking to keep coal-fired power stations open for extended periods, it condemns thousands of workers to early retirement or years on the dole hoping for jobs that simply can’t be found in places such as the Hunter Valley. Even worse, there seems to be little concern for the weak and the frail who will not be able to afford airconditioning this summer, or will have no access to it because of brownouts and blackouts.

This summer will lay bare the weaknesses of Labor’s policy and you can bet London to a brick that Shorten will have to change tack. My advice to Bill is to modify his policy before he is forced to. A forlorn wish, I think.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/opinion/columnists/graham-richardson/blackout-bi...



And a couple of telling COMMENTS just to irk the Lefties

Andrew 43 minutes ago
BLACK OUT BILL vs TURN THE LIGHTS ON TURNBULL
If the election was fought around restoring base-load capacity by commissioning new coal-fired power stations and ending costly green energy scams, Turnbull would bolt home.

Stan 45 minutes ago
Winter is over and now waiting with bated breath for the promised nationwide blackouts. This does look to me a lot like the scare campaign of the millennium bug - although this time is mainly being pushed by the technical illiterate whackos. Talk about the inmates thinking they are in charge of the asylum! Anyway best of luck with the promised blackouts as will be a colossal disappointment if they somehow fail to eventuate. Maybe need to pray for hot overcast Spring and Summer with little wind (and certainly no more snow for the hydro) - and Liddell Power Station continuing to operate at its usual below 40% reliability.

Greg 2 hours ago
"The energy policy in South Australia shows the folly of chasing the wonderful goal of ­renewable sources providing all of our power needs without waiting for the proven technology that would make that goal possible." ON the contrary, Richo, the technology exists but your side is hyperallergic to it - nuclear. It's clean, cheap, efficient and reliable. and in use in multiple countries around the world. In fact, the number of nuclear reactors in increasing faster than the number of china's new coal-fired power stations. Why doesn't labor bring itself up to speed on the state of contemporary nuclear technology?

Botswana O'Hooligan1 hour ago
@Greg Coal plentiful and cheap so why go down the nuclear path when we have untold amounts of coal? If a nuclear power plant blows up as they often do, the land around them is contaminated for a very long time, but if a coal powered plant blows up which they seldom do, a new one can be built on the same ground as it were as soon as the debris is cleaned up. Another question is one of how much pollution does building a nuclear anything generate compared to building something run on coal. No one with the expertise bothers to give us those figures, certainly not a government who in any case don't know and don't care although this time it appears likely that they are going to have to care or lose office.

David 2 hours ago
If as Graham says Turnbull finally hit a nail on the head by calling Labor the blackout party, the headline on his column gets the nail full force with a sledge hammer with the words 'Blackout Bill'. Malcolm take Graham's advice for a change. Commit to more highly efficiency coal generated power before it's too late.
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« Last Edit: Sep 8th, 2017 at 11:22am by juliar »  
 
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juliar
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #4 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 1:58pm
 
The paw Lefties are so distraught they can't mutter utter or stutter a single word of hate filled abuse.
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John Smith
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #5 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 2:43pm
 
ohh wow ... the energy bosses and their minions cry that it's not true, gee, who didn't see that coming?  Cheesy Cheesy

I mean apart from Juliar?
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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juliar
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #6 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 5:45pm
 
Mr Smith just cannot handle the TRUTH but then everybody knows that Lefties flee from the TRUTH like Blowflies flee from Mortein.
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juliar
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #7 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 7:41pm
 
Now that Mr Smith has retired defeated one can get back to the topic.

Who said a leopard can't change its spots ? Well now Bull S. is starting to support clean coal.

The climatically confused Globally Warmed Lefties and Greenies will be appalled.




Labor hedges on coal-fired power station
Paul Osborne, AAP Senior Political Writer Australian Associated PressSEPTEMBER 8, 20172:43PM

Bill Shorten has likened a NSW power station to a 50-year-old car, but still is open to the idea of extending its life.

Bill Shorten says Labor won't rule out supporting extending the life of a NSW coal-fired power station, despite comparing it to a 50-year-old car.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg will meet with executives from AGL - owner of the Liddell power station in the Hunter Valley - in Canberra on Monday to discuss keeping the plant open beyond its scheduled 2022 shutdown.

A new report says eastern states risk blackouts if 1000 megawatts can't be found to fill the gap in electricity demand as old coal-fired power is shut down.

Labor says the government needs to think beyond a plan for Liddell and quickly adopt a clean energy target, as recommended by Chief Scientist Alan Finkel, to give investors long-term certainty.

"With the Liddell power station, it's 50 years old. What car do (people) drive that is 50 years old?" Mr Shorten told reporters in Melbourne on Friday.

"If something can be done, which is commercial, Labor is not going to immediately rule that out.
"But ... I hope (Mr Turnbull's) got a little bit more than just that plan."

The lack of a clear set of rules was discouraging investors in energy generation, pushing up prices and making the system less reliable, Mr Shorten said.

Mr Turnbull said keeping Liddell open for up to five years was an obvious solution, but not the only one.

"That's one option, there will no doubt be others," he told reporters in Samoa, where he was attending the Pacific Islands Forum.

NSW power station operator Delta Electricity had indicated interest in Liddell, and the prime minister imagined other energy companies would also examine it.

Labor climate spokesman Mark Butler said he did not accept the premise there would be a shortfall in electricity generation.

"We don't have a problem with old plants closing, the problem is that we don't have a plan to replace them and I know that if we put a clean energy target in place ... we would see substantial investment flow," he said.

The Australian Greens oppose lengthening Liddell's life, and are instead calling for the orderly retirement of coal-fired power stations.

The Greens say supply issues can be addressed by boosting dispatchable renewable power, improving storage such as batteries and better managing demand.

Treasurer Scott Morrison said it was important to keep Liddell and other coal-fired power stations open.

"(Mr Shorten) needs to be straight with particularly the many, many Labor Party supporters who have relied on the Labor Party up there in the Hunter Valley for their jobs and they're walking away from them," he told reporters in Sydney.

"They've put up the white flag on coal-fired power in the Hunter Valley and they're selling them out."

http://www.news.com.au/national/breaking-news/labor-hedges-on-coalfired-power-st...


...
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Dnarever
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #8 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 8:08pm
 
Quote:
Bill Shorten’s claim that the electricity crisis has been driven by privatisation has been dismissed by business leaders and energy experts, and prompted accu­sations from a former NSW Labor treasurer that the Opposition Leader is abandoning the Keating government reform agenda.

Former Business Council of Australia president and 2014 ­National Commission of Audit chairman Tony Shepherd dismissed Mr Shorten’s attack on private-sector energy companies, declaring that the crisis was “not a failure of markets” but “a failure of governments’’.


business leaders and energy experts

The guys who bought the power companies and support them say it isn't their fault that the infrastructure is failing and the costs have increased and standards reduced due to privatisation.

Tony Shepherd dismissed Mr Shorten’s attack on private-sector energy companies, declaring that the crisis was “not a failure of markets” but “a failure of governments’’.


I would go both ways on this, The markets have been a failure (for the consumers) but it is also true that the governments who allowed privatisation were the root cause that originally allowed the industry to flounder and fail.
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #9 - Sep 8th, 2017 at 10:03pm
 
Quote:
The above table highlights the impacts of the uncertainty associated with variable generation and its ability to provide supply during coincident peak demand conditions. AEMO’s records show that wind generation output within a region during peak conditions can fall to as low as 2% of installed capacity, however, given the scale of the NEM, geographic diversity tends to increase the average output of variable generation, and 5% of capacity has been allowed for in the above case study. The ability to achieve this geographic diversity can, however, be limited by the interconnectedness of the transmission system.


https://www.aemo.com.au/-/media/Files/Media_Centre/2017/Advice-To-Commonwealth-G...
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #10 - Sep 9th, 2017 at 3:27pm
 
The Coalition have been in power for 4 years and done nothing to improve certainty in the energy sector....Blaming Bill Shorten who has never been the Prime Minister shows the Coalition have no policies apart from blaming everyone else for their own policy failures!!!

Quote:
Energy giant AGL has urged sharply divided Coalition MPs to end the political paralysis causing dysfunction in the power sector, saying without durable policy at the federal and state level, there will only be "more of the same".

At a private briefing for MPs on Monday, executives from AGL said not only were energy investment decisions being hamstrung by political risk, there was also technology risk. MPs heard that energy technology, especially in the renewables sector was changing so fast, there was a reluctance to invest in giant projects for fear they may become obsolete.


http://www.afr.com/news/politics/energy-company-urges-govt-mps-to-end-the-uncert...

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/jun/14/next-time-you-read-your-in...

Roll Eyes Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #11 - Sep 9th, 2017 at 4:57pm
 
philperth2010 wrote on Sep 9th, 2017 at 3:27pm:
without durable policy at the federal and state level



So remind me which states are coalition states?
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Re: Blackouts Bull S. short circuited
Reply #12 - Sep 9th, 2017 at 6:17pm
 
juliar wrote on Sep 8th, 2017 at 10:59am:
The local Lefties must be really proud of their hero Bull S.

They had to use a shovel to clear away the bulldust oozing out of Bull S.




Bill Shorten’s power play debunked
The Australian 12:00AM September 8, 2017

http://i63.tinypic.com/2emkas8.jpg
What a flamin' goose!!!!!

Bill Shorten’s claim that the electricity crisis has been driven by privatisation has been dismissed by business leaders and energy experts, and prompted accu­sations from a former NSW Labor treasurer that the Opposition Leader is abandoning the Keating government reform agenda.

Former Business Council of Australia president and 2014 ­National Commission of Audit chairman Tony Shepherd dismissed Mr Shorten’s attack on private-sector energy companies, declaring that the crisis was “not a failure of markets” but “a failure of governments’’.

The nation’s energy regulator this week called for the creation of a power reserve to prevent the heightened risk of blackouts and brownouts this summer in Vic­toria and South Australia and the potential for power shortfalls in NSW if the AGL-owned Liddell coal-fired station is shut, as scheduled, in 2022.

Rising electricity and gas ­prices have sparked warnings from leading companies that jobs and investment will be threatened and costs will be passed on to consumers through higher prices.

Mr Shorten used an ABC radio interview to argue that the privatisation of electricity assets in the 1990s had seen the nation lose control of prices and to claim that a “ruthless pursuit of profits’’ by energy companies was hurting the nation.

“There is no doubt that privatisation has been a big problem and I think the debate in Australia needs to recognise that,’’ he said.

Former NSW Labor treasurer Michael Costa, who resigned his position in 2008 when he and then premier Morris Iemma failed in their bid to privatise the NSW electricity generators and retailers in the face of trade union opposition, accused Mr Shorten of “ignorance’’ and abandoning Labor’s blue-collar base.

“Bill Shorten doesn’t understand electricity markets or markets in general … prices reflect the distortions that governments have created,’’ Mr Costa said.

“Bill should remember the electricity market reforms were started by the Keating government. He is sounding more and more like a left-wing socialist ideologue. Labor’s 50 per cent renewable energy target is a further betrayal of blue-collar workers and will lead to the deindustrialisation of Australia.’’

Mr Shepherd told The Australian the electricity market was set up on a basis that had “no recognition of the capacity to deliver power consistently”, so the rise of renewable energy had made coal and gas less competitive. This had resulted in less investment in coal and gas generation and a “steady decline in baseload capacity”.

“Unfortunately these market arrangements had led to a doubling of the cost of electricity for the average consumer and serious ­issues in their reliability and availability,” Mr Shepherd said.

“The solution is not renationalisation but correction of the fundamental flaws in the market and the market rules as established.”

Former Victorian premier Jeff Kennett said Mr Shorten had proved he was “yesterday’s man, with yesterday’s ideas and he has absolutely no relevance to Australia in 2017, and sadly he has absolutely no relevance for Aus­tralia into the future’’.

Mr Shorten last week singled out Victoria as an example where privatisation had failed. “What happened is that these electricity generators were sold at a very high one-off price and the private operators, ever since then, have been basically trying to screw down costs and bleed these assets to recoup some of the money they paid for it,” Mr Shorten said.

“So I think the privatisation has been a net-negative in electrical generation and I think that we’re seeing some of the problems with privatisation come home to roost in 2017.”

Mr Kennett, who privatised Victoria’s electricity assets in the 1990s, slammed Mr Shorten’s “ignorant” claim that electricity privatisation was a failure, declaring it showed the Labor leader was “totally incapable” of leading Australia.

“It is not that privatisation was wrong; it is the failure of governments since then to work with the private sector to develop an industry that was going to meet the needs of the Australian community,” Mr Kennett said.

Electrical Trades Union NSW secretary Dave McKinley backed Mr Shorten’s attack on privatisation, declaring it had “failed the people of Australia” and resulted in “higher prices and a loss of control over an essential service”.

ACTU president Ged Kearney took to Twitter to back Mr Shorten’s call for a debate on the privatisation of electricity assets. “Privatisation was a big mistake — and still is! We definitely need a conversation about it,” she said.

Be enthralled with the piles of bulldust leaking out of Bull S. continued overleaf


...
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