Australia politics live: Pocock says power bill rebate a ‘Band-Aid’ not a cost-of-living cure; Littleproud says solution is ‘more gas’ | Australia news

Pocock says power bill rebate a ‘Band-Aid’, not a cost-of-living cure

A little earlier, the independent senator David Pocock was on ABC News Breakfast, calling for gas to be diverted to the domestic market to keep energy prices from soaring.

He said there was a “gas export problem” in Australia that was driving up prices, and diverting it would address the predicted domestic shortfall.

We don’t have a gas supply shortage, we have a gas export problem in Australia … I’m calling for uncontracted gas [to be] diverted to the domestic market until that [shortfall] is fully met.

Asked about whether the $150 rebate was appropriate or whether that money should go instead to electrifying households, Pocock said it was “welcome” but described it as a “Band-Aid” solution.

We’re just putting Band-Aids on when we could be dealing with the root cause here. [It’s] 150 bucks versus thousands of dollars of savings if you could help households electrify.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Queensland Premier David Crisafulli is with the PM and has welcomed the agreement, that gives an extra $2.8bn to the state’s public schools to 2034.

Crisafulli says this will bring generational reform, and highlights the challenges Queensland has in its schooling system.

It is a historic agreement… This means a lot to Queensland, and it means a lot because we’ve got some challenges in our schooling systems that other states don’t have. We are the most decentralized state. We’ve got a large portion of rural and regional and Indigenous schools.

He says the agreement was an opportunity “too good to miss”.

Share

Leave a Comment