With Australia in the grips of the third global energy crisis in six years, we – a coalition of energy, industry and consumer advocacy organisations – comprising the Energy Consumers Australia, Energy Efficiency Council, Electric Vehicle Council, Green Building Council of Australia, Rewiring Australia and Australian Alliance for Energy Productivity – call on Australian governments meeting for National Cabinet on Monday to bolster the security, affordability and productivity of Australia’s energy systems by turbocharging electrification across the economy.
Australia’s cost of living crisis is being exacerbated by higher fuel prices for Australian motorists and businesses. If supply chain disruptions persist, experts expect Australia’s gas prices to increase as well, adding to inflationary pressure across the economy. And even if the crisis ends tomorrow, it will take time for supplies to be restored and prices to normalise.
Acknowledging the Prime Minister’s recognition on Friday of EV support as a cost of living measure, we urge governments to move quickly to help Australians make the switch to efficient electric technologies where possible.
It is increasingly clear that accelerating the shift to electrification is critical to Australia’s economic and national security. It helps insulate Australians from volatile international commodity markets, leverages our abundant home-grown renewable energy advantage, reduces running costs, and puts Australian business on a more competitive footing.
Electric technologies also boost energy productivity, being on average three times more efficient than fossil fuel-based systems, and reducing overall energy use while increasing the energy services delivered (Ember, 2025).
Research shows that 75 per cent of the global energy system can be electrified now with existing technologies (Ember, 2025). Overall, around 21.5 per cent of Australia’s energy demand is met by electricity. That is growing, albeit slowly at 0.3 percentage points per year, with patchy performance across different sectors across the economy.
We can do much better than that. It is in Australia’s national interest to take a giant leap forward in the adoption of electric technologies, including electric cars and trucks, heat pumps, induction cooktops and clean industrial heat.
We call on the federal, state and territory governments to place Australia’s energy security at the top of their agenda by supporting Australian motorists, households and businesses to electrify now. Key actions to deliver on include:
- Helping more households and businesses make the switch to electric cars and trucks, including through retention of the Electric Car Discount, financial incentives for freight operators to go electric and public infrastructure.
- Accelerating efforts to get Australian homes and commercial buildings off gas appliances, and onto efficient electric alternatives, including targeted support for those who face barriers such as renters, apartment-dwellers and low-income Australians.
- Supporting manufacturers and food processors to electrify their operations where technically feasible, with a focus on clean industrial heat technologies.
- Maintaining momentum on the roll-out of renewable energy, storage and grid development, supporting supply to keep pace with rising electricity demand.
- Investing in public communications programs to educate Australians about the benefits of electrification, and the range of support available to make the switch.
Appendix – Australian electrification share, by sector – 2023-24
| Sector | Electrified share |
|---|---|
| Economy-wide | 21.5% |
| Transport (road, rail, air, water) | 1.5% |
| Road transport (all) | 0.13% |
| Residential buildings | 53% |
| Commercial buildings | 73% |
| Industry (all) | 25.5% |
Source: Australian Energy Statistics 2025, Table H: Total final energy consumption in Australia, by industry, by fuel, energy units
For further information, please contact:
- Gabriel Wong: Positive Good for all general media enquiries and on behalf of the Energy Efficiency Council, gabriel@positivegood.com.au
- A2EP: Laura Taylor, laura.taylor@a2ep.org.au
- Energy Consumers Australia: Patrick Veyret
- Electric Vehicle Council: Aman Gaur
- Rewiring Australia: Francis Vierboom