Explore Justice:

Objectives

From heating to hot water, lighting to laptops, our access to energy is essential for a reasonable standard of living. So how is it possible in today’s Australia that people who can’t afford it can so easily have an essential service disconnected? Other countries increasingly protect vulnerable people – such as infants – from losing supply. We want to see a new normal where disconnection is a last resort.

More of us are entering energy affordability programs – and with higher debt. We have to ask, if energy is an essential service, how can it be unaffordable? There are two big issues here: there is no common understanding of what effective, sustainable support measures look like, and no consistent application of the supports that do exist. We need to identify and put in place long term supports that work to break the cycle of energy poverty.

The energy system isn’t consistently providing affordable and reliable energy to consumers, and some rules have too little regard for consumer interests. This means consumers aren’t sufficiently protected against inequitable and sometimes unfair outcomes. Energy ombudsmen don’t have the mandate to support consumers across all their energy decisions. Along with other advocates, ECA has called for regulatory reforms to ensure consumers are treated fairly – but we want to approach things from a new angle: we think there should be an overarching obligation to ensure better consumer protections and outcomes for consumers.

Since the pandemic, the proportion of households and small businesses having difficulties affording their energy bills has increased. We’re seeing a widening energy divide in Australia between consumers who can easily access efficient, reliable, and affordable energy, and those who can’t. People living in First Nations communities and small businesses in embedded networks are among those most at risk. If we are to avoid the energy transition creating an entrenched energy underclass in Australia, we need proper planning and policy interventions.

With extreme weather events increasing due to climate change, we need to help build energy resilience, especially in regional and rural communities. To do this, people living in potentially affected areas will need toolkits, resources, and assistance to help them, and they will need to work together and be prepared to take action if their power goes out due to a bushfire, flood or cyclone.  Forewarned is forearmed so every community should have a resilience plan in place as soon as possible.

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Showing 1 - 9 of 58 results
Illustration of young girl reading book outside house
Grants Archive
12 March 2023
(Em)powering communities on the journey to energy resilience
(Em)powering communities on the journey to energy resilience
News
17 April 2024
5 min read
A path to equity: empowering CALD communities through an inclusive energy transition
A doctor sits next to a patient and holds their hand.
Grant
22 October 2025
4 min read
Breaking the link between poor health and energy hardship
Energy Consumers Australia provided funding to the Victorian Council of Social Service (VCOSS) to address the connection between energy hardship and poor health.
Welcome to Hawker sign
Grant
30 May 2025
3 min read
Building energy resilience in the Flinders Ranges region
Learn how an ECA grant to the First Nations Clean Energy Network helped lay the foundations to build energy resilience in the Flinders Ranges.
Photo of a hand holding a piece of paper with 'Energy Bill' written on it; next to a desktop and laptop.
28 July 2025
Consumer Energy Report Card: Understanding and measuring energy hardship in Australia
Read our latest report on understanding and measuring energy hardship in Australia. This report is based on survey data from our Consumer Energy Report Card.
04 March 2021
2 min read
COVID-19 Energy Bill Support Education for Aboriginal Households
This project was funded to help Aboriginal consumers receive information about managing their energy bills when COVID-19 first hit.
Close-up photo of two hands, one is reaching out to touch the other.
News
27 May 2025
8 min read
Doing the right thing by consumers – an aspirational utopia or an enforceable duty?
Should we just hope energy companies do the right thing, or should they be required to?
News
26 July 2024
4 min read
First Nations-led project invites energy suppliers to be part of the solution
Media release announcing a new, first-of-its-kind First Nations-led research project.
News
10 March 2022
8 min read
Hardship is hiding in plain sight. It’s time we opened our eyes.
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