The Australian Energy Market Commission (AEMC) has made a draft rule that would accelerate the deployment of smart meters to energy customers by 2030, bringing to life foundational recommendations from its smart meter review and placing consumers at the forefront of the transition to net zero.
The AEMCโs self-initiated review was published on 30 August 2023, with a number of final recommendations including an accelerated rollout of smart meters, better information for customers ahead of a meter upgrade, new customer protections, and improved data access arrangements for networks and energy customers.
AEMC chair Anna Collyer said smart meters offer consumers increased visibility into their energy use, allowing them to better understand and manage their bills while also opening up access to new and improved retail service options.
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โA number of Australians are already using smart meters to cut power bills, from those who have resources such as rooftop solar, to customers without solar who may be using smart meters to access cheaper tariffs,โ Collyer said.
โSmart meters present clear benefits for consumers and form a crucial link for the wider energy system, paving the way for significant advances necessary to reach net zero.โ
The accelerated replacement of legacy meters is expected to deliver net benefits of $507 million for national electricity market regions, including New South Wales, Queensland, the Australian Capital Territory, and South Australia.
Collyer said the draft rule was the first step in a broader program of work to modernise and digitise the energy system, with the AEMC committed to progressing further reforms, including customer access to real-time data from smart meters.
Proposed reforms under the draft rule
The draft rule includes two core reforms, so that customers and the broader energy system can access the benefits that smart meters offer sooner:
- Accelerated deployment of smart metersโdeploying smart meters to customers faster to achieve cost savings, support a modern, data-enabled energy system, and give customers access to a range of benefits sooner.
- Access to Power Quality Dataโimproving network access to important power quality information so that they can better manage their networks, reduce network costs for customers, save energy, and minimise network safety risks.
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In addition, the draft rule also includes four supporting reforms:
- New customer safeguardsโprotecting customers from potential cost risks by prohibiting any upfront costs ahead of a smart meter installation, and increasing notification requirements ahead of tariff changes.
- Improving the customer experienceโensuring that customers can access the full suite of benefits that smart meters provide, including by introducing new customer-friendly information requirements.
- Reducing barriers to installationโsupporting delivery efficiencies, and therefore cost savings in the accelerated deployment of smart meters.
- Improved meter testing and inspectionsโhelping minimise costs and improve efficiencies for industry and customers.
The proposed rules in the AEMCโs draft determination would commence progressively, beginning 25 July 2024.