Skip to content
Energy, Environment

Electrification projects welcome: ARENA should prioritise disadvantaged households and communities

ACOSS 2 mins read

ACOSS welcomes the agreement between the Federal Labor Government and Senators David Pocock, Jacqui Lambie, Lidia Thorpe and David Van to task ARENA to invest in home electrification projects - and urges ARENA to prioritise disadvantage households. 

As a result of the agreement, Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen has tasked the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) with considering funding for more community electrification demonstration projects across the country, off the back of a $5.4 million pilot that commenced in Wollongong in October last year.  

The projects aim to help more people access solar, batteries, energy efficient appliances and shared community energy storage to permanently cut energy bills and speed up the energy transition. 

“We applaud Senators Pocock, Lambie, Thorpe, Van and the Federal Government for listening to the voices of the community and working together to deliver this funding, which will help ensure more people, including low-income households, benefit from the energy transition,” said ACOSS CEO Dr Cassandra Goldie. 

“This is good news for people living in hot boxes, struggling with heatwaves and high energy bills.  

Houses that are more thermally efficient, fully electric and with solar can save households up to $3,487 a year and reduce temperatures in the home. 

“We urge ARENA to ensure projects have a strong focus on low-income housing, rental properties and First Nations Communities, who are missing out on the benefits of home energy upgrades.  

People experiencing financial disadvantage are more likely to live in poor energy performing homes, and as a result are more likely to get sick in the summer heat, face high energy bills and go without food, medicines and other essentials to manage their bills. 

We need a $50 billion investment over the next decade that prioritises people and communities experiencing disadvantage to help more people cut their energy bills, protect them from the ravages of heatwaves, and speed up the energy transition. 

“Prioritising disadvantaged households would reduce energy hardship and inequality, reduce illness, and build social license for faster action to tackle the climate change crisis,” Dr Goldie said. 

As we head into an election, ACOSS urges all parties and candidates to: 

  • Build on the critical federal investment into home energy upgrades for social housing to commit to upgrade ALL social housing, prioritising First Nations social housing.  

  • Provide support* to the States and Territories to implement mandatory energy performance standards for rental properties. 

  • Provide support* to help low-income homeowners access home energy upgrades.  

An ACOSS-commissioned Deloitte Report found that a home energy upgrade program focused on low-income households could generate up to $17 billion in gross domestic product and create 12,700 full time jobs. 

*Support includes subsidies, zero or low-interest loans, and culturally appropriate ‘one-stop-shop services’ that provide tailored information and support like access to energy audits, qualified and certified trades, financial supports. 


Contact details:

Lauren Ferri: 0422 581 506

More from this category

  • Energy, Environment
  • 13/05/2026
  • 11:54
Schneider Electric

Schneider Electric reports strong early progress under new sustainability roadmap, Impact 2030

Sydney, Australia, May 13, 2026– Schneider Electric, a global energy technology leader, today published the 2026 first-quarter results of its new sustainability roadmap, Impact 2030. Building on Schneider Electric’s long-standing leadership and distinctive approach to sustainability, Impact2030 structures the Group’s ambition around four strategic pillars – electrifying the world, reinventing the industry, unlocking human potential, and empowering local communities – translated into targeted programs and reported through measurable performance indicators. In the first quarter of this new cycle, the Impact score reached 3.40/10, a strong start towards the Group’s annual 2026 target of 4.20/10 (10/10 being the 2030 ambition). The…

  • Environment, Federal Budget
  • 13/05/2026
  • 10:41
Greenpeace Australia Pacific

‘Missing the moment’: Budget 2026 misses the mark on climate and nature

SYDNEY, 13 May 2026 — Greenpeace Australia Pacific has labelled last night’s Federal Budget as a monumental fumble on climate and nature, and one that fails to fund the urgently needed transition away from fossil fuels while falling short on investments in environmental protection. Despite widespread calls for a 25% tax on gas exports, the Federal Government has instead given the fossil fuel industry a $19 billion free pass in annual subsidies and foregone gas tax revenue, while merely maintaining, rather than expanding, programs that are helping Australian households embrace renewable energy. The government should be commended for significant and…

  • Energy, Federal Budget
  • 13/05/2026
  • 10:14
RACE for 2030

Budget investment in consumer energy resources can unlock more ambitious visions for the sector

MEDIA RELEASE 13 MAY 2026 Budget investment in consumer energy resources can unlock more ambitious visions for the sector The Federal Government’s budget commitment to a new Consumer Energy Resources (CER) National Technical Regulator is a welcome announcement that can unlock more ambitious visions for the future of Australia’s grid, says the RACE for 2030 cooperative research centre. The 2026–27 Federal Budget allocates $25.3 million over four years to establish the national regulator, as part of a broader $97.3 million reform package aimed at enabling greater participation of households in the electricity market. The Government estimates that better coordination of…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.