Electricity generators have rebuked the Turnbull government for delaying the introduction of a clean energy target, arguing a target will trigger new investment and bring down power bills.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will meet the bosses of some of Australia's biggest power companies in Sydney on Wednesday for a second round of discussions about rising power prices.
PM's power price push
Electricity retailers have met with PM Malcolm Turnbull and Energy minister Josh Frydenberg, discussing ways to lower power prices and it seems they've come to an agreement.
It is their second meeting in a month; the last one saw an agreement for millions of Australians to be notified when their discount electricity plans expire, which could save households more than $1000 a year, as well as some other consumer protection measures.Â
The companies who will attend the next meeting include Energy Australia, Momentum Energy, Simply Energy, Alinta Energy, Origin Energy, AGL, Australian Energy Council and Snowy Hydro.
The electricity companies and the Turnbull government are expected to agree on Wednesday that power companies will write to all customers on a "standing offer" contract and point out, where possible, that they may be able to sign up to a cheaper deal.
Ahead of the Wednesday meeting, Australian Energy Council chief executive Matthew Warren again said - speaking for Australia's 21 major electricity and gas generators - that implementing a clean energy target was the most effective way to bring down power prices.
Mr Warren said the industry would continue to work constructively with the government on how to ensure customers are getting a good deal on their electricity.
"The current spike in electricity bills is the result of a shortage of supply in the generation or wholesale market," he said.
![Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull with Upper Tumut Area Manager Kent Allen, during his tour of the Snowy Hydro Tumut 2 ...](https://www.fairfaxstatic.com.au/content/dam/images/g/y/5/l/7/r/image.related.articleLeadwide.620x349.gy5i4m.png/1503898488007.jpg)
"If you want to fix power bills, you have to fix that problem. New investment to replace Australia's ageing fleet of power stations is stalled as the result of a decade of national climate and energy policy uncertainty."
"The government's own independent advice led by the Chief Scientist, Dr Alan Finkel, has recommended a technology neutral clean energy target as a workable policy solution to break this investment impasse. Like most other stakeholders we endorse this recommendation and will continue to support the federal government in delivering this urgent policy breakthrough as quickly as possible."
![Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull during his tour of the Snowy Hydro Tumut 2 power station](https://www.fairfaxstatic.com.au/content/dam/images/g/y/5/l/8/4/image.related.articleLeadwide.620x349.gy5i4m.png/1503898488007.jpg)
The Turnbull government has agreed to adopt 49 of the 50 recommendations of the Finkel review of the electricity sector - but not the clean energy target.Â
A backbench revolt over the clean energy target recommendation, just days after the release of the Finkel review, has seen the government push back implementation.
![Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull boards a helicopter tour for an aerial view of the region.](https://www.fairfaxstatic.com.au/content/dam/images/g/y/5/l/5/x/image.related.articleLeadwide.620x349.gy5i4m.png/1503898488007.jpg)
The government is also awaiting an Australian Energy Market Operator report on Australia's future baseload power needs before deciding how to proceed.
Speaking in Cooma at the announcement of an extra $8 million federal contribution to a feasibility study into Snowy Hydro 2.0, Mr Turnbull said his government was working through the Finkel recommendations.
"We are taking this very carefully. Can I tell you, having a renewable energy target or a CET -Â clean energy target -Â by itself is not going to ensure we have the baseload power we need in the years ahead. There is quite a lot of complexity in this. The one thing we do know, is we need a lot more storage.
"We're working through it. It is very important that you have the right plan going forward. So vitally important that we also get that information from [the Australian Energy Market Operator]. We have to get a handle on the size of the problem we are facing in terms of dispatchable or baseload power."
Mr Turnbull said the second meeting demonstrated his government was acting in the short term, too, to help Australians struggling with high power prices.
An ebullient Prime Minister said the Snowy Hydro expansion would make renewable energy reliable.
Opposition Leader Bill Shorten said Australia was in the middle of a gas and energy price crisis and that he had not done enough to help Australians with their power bills.
To that end, Mr Shorten said, the Prime Minister needed to ensure "we're not selling Australian gas more cheaply to companies in Japan than Australian companies can pay for that gas in Australia" as this would put downward pressure on prices.
He also criticised Mr Turnbull for taking a "joyride" in a helicopter up to the Snowy Hydro power station, but not delivering on a promise to halve gas prices.