Mark _australia said...
Dude, that reeks of Govt spin-speak.
I did say i worked in the energy sector!

Seems to be consensus that governement should provide essential goods and services. Yet there is little complaint about essentials like food and housing being supplied via the market. I would argue that food is more 'essential' than electricity. Companies make unrestricted profits from the retail of these products. Maybe it is because these market are more competitive?
History would also show that government run enterprises are less efficient than a market based system. Failure of communism would be circumstancial proof of this. Humans seem to need to be incentivised to achieve maximum efficiency. If a market based system is more efficient, then in the long run it should be more benficial for the community as a whole (tax
structure
should take care of this).
The WA electricity industry was split into three different enterprises in order to achieve a similar industry structure to the Eastern States NEM, in order to foster competition amongst electricity generators (and eventually retailers). Arguably it has not had the best result. But it potentially provides for greater competition in the future, and a more efficient market.
I don't see how if a war, etc causes private companies to pack up and leave the utilities industry that this would be a bad result. Most foreign companies are more anxious about expropriation of assets than the other way around. They are taking all the monetary risk for construction of infrastructure, etc and would receive zero reward if assets were expropriated by government.
People complain about selling natural gas cheap to China, yet the Western Australia natural gas resources industry wouldn't exist as we know it without the demand supplied by foreign markets (highly captilized business requires economies of scale).
Price of thermal coal has also risen from something like $24 a tonne to around $130 a tonne over the last ten years (500% price rise). I think the main problem regarding electicty prices is increase in price of primary energy (Coal, Oil and Gas) as opposed to the structure of secondary energy market.
Anyways, didn't mean this to sound like marketing for the energy industry (although it probably does). And also didn't mean to make such a long reply.. had a few drinks, sorry...