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Why the government must break eastern Australia’s gas cartel

August 15, 2022
Bruce Robertson

Key Findings

Controlling a market, using anti-competitive practices, and price fixing are all key features of a cartel.

Unless gas prices are controlled in eastern Australia, we will face a rolling gas and electricity price crisis that will destroy jobs and cause hardship to individuals.

Last week, the Australian Consumer and Competition Commission (ACCC) released its latest report on the east coast gas market, a large source of work for Australia’s competition watchdog. The ACCC has been running a never-ending inquiry into the industry since 2015. 

Unfortunately, the inquiry has yielded few solutions as east coast Australians have periodically paid well above international prices for locally produced gas. 

The record high gas prices on Australia’s east coast directly add to electricity costs, up 300% in 2022 versus last year. This is because gas sets the high prices for electricity in the wholesale market. This secondary effect is damaging the Australian economy the most.

Eastern Australia’s energy woes do not extend to Western Australia, where successive governments have ensured that domestic consumers pay reasonable prices through their domestic gas reservation policy.

While the ACCC report trumpeted gas “shortages”, the report reveals that eastern Australia has an embarrassment of riches. 

We have enough gas to oversupply the domestic market and meet the export contracts with 167 petajoules, equivalent to 29% of the domestic market, to spare.

Eastern Australia is swimming in gas, with production trebling since 2014. We have enough gas to oversupply the domestic market and meet the export contracts with 167 petajoules (PJ), equivalent to 29% of the domestic market, to spare.

The ACCC does some intellectual somersaults to frame this embarrassment of riches as a shortfall. It assumes the cartel will export all the excess gas, which is fair enough given the cartel’s penchant for starving the domestic market and price gouging east Australians. 

The report shows that we can have a domestic gas reservation in eastern Australia for more than the domestic market and satisfy the long-term export contracts. In other words, we can have our cake and eat it too.

The ACCC report should cause alarm to all Australians who respect the rule of law. It outlines all the key aspects of a cartel, and cartels are illegal market structures.

The three liquefied natural gas (LNG) exporters and their associates had influence over close to 90% of the reserves on the east coast.

This highlights the effective control that the LNG exporters have over gas supply and development on the east coast, as well as the lack of competition in the domestic market.

The three LNG exporters not only control the supply of gas on the east coast but also use this power to institute anti-competitive practices, many of which the ACCC points out may be illegal.

These include:

  • Entering into production joint ventures that may delay the development of gas.
  • Joint marketing arrangements to reduce the number of producers competing to supply gas for the domestic market.
  • Exclusivity provisions in some of its gas supply agreements with smaller producers restrict the ability of domestic producers to compete to supply gas into the domestic market.
  • Mergers and acquisitions.

Controlling a market, using anti-competitive practices, and price fixing are all key features of a cartel.

Controlling a market, using anti-competitive practices and price fixing are all key features of a cartel.

While the ACCC report falls short of naming it a cartel, it forensically describes a cartel. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it is a duck. We are dealing with an illegal cartel.

The ACCC has been long on rhetoric and limited in its prosecution of anti-competitive behaviour. A notable exception was its breaking up of the BHP-ExxonMobil joint marketing arrangement for Bass Strait gas.

In some cases, the ACCC has aided and abetted the gas cartel. For example, it waived through the takeover of Arrow Energy by Shell and Petrochina, further concentrating reserves in the cartel.

We are in a rolling domestic energy crisis precipitated by unprecedented gas prices. Unless the government controls the cartel, our gas price crisis will not dissipate. 

More production will not solve the problem as the cartel will just export more and/or supply less to the domestic market. What we face is a gas price crisis, not a supply crisis.

Unless gas prices are controlled in eastern Australia, we will face a rolling gas and electricity price crisis that will destroy jobs and cause hardship to individuals.

As Dr Ken Henry said, an east Australia gas export levy would instantaneously solve the problem by giving the right economic price signal – to maximise profits, the cartel would prioritise domestic gas users and only export the surplus.

The time for talk is over.

 

This analysis first appeared in the Newcastle Herald.

Bruce Robertson

Bruce Robertson has been an investment analyst, fund manager and professional investor for over 36 years. He has worked with Perpetual Trustees, UBS, Nippon Life Insurance and BT.

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