Skip to content
Agriculture Farming Rural, Energy

Hundreds of regional Victorians sign open letter to the Australian Energy Regulator asking for upgrades to local energy infrastructure

Farmers for Climate Action 2 mins read

Thursday 30th of January 2025

Some 500 regional Victorians have already signed an open letter asking for upgrades to local energy infrastructure, put forward by Farmers for Climate Action - and FCA is asking more people to add their voice.

The open letter is addressed to the Australian Energy Regulator, which must sign off on regional energy infrastructure upgrades such as poles and wires. Farmers for Climate Action is asking those who live on the Powercor Network in Western Victoria, to help fight for a better local network by signing the open letter.

 

The proposed upgrades include:

  • $50 million to upgrade Single Wire Earth Return lines

  • $2M for energy literacy programs

  • $2.1M for expert energy advisory services

  • $4.8M for community-led renewable energy projects 

  • $5.9M for vulnerable customer assistance to support electrification 

 

Powercor has said these investments would increase bills by only $4 per year. 

 

The open letter follows the Rural and Regional Energy Summit in Bendigo in October 2024 hosted by FCA in partnership with Powercor. The Summit brought together Powercor customers from across Western Victoria to discuss the 2026-31 Regulatory Reset.

 

FCA CEO Natalie Collard said these upgrades were “a no-brainer”.

“Rural and regional Victorians pay the most for electricity yet suffer from the most blackouts,” Ms Collard said.

“Rural and regional Victoria produces the electricity our cities use, and rural and regional Victoria deserves the same quality of energy service that cities receive - FCA calls on the Australian Energy Regulator (AER) to back these investments  to give regional Victorians fair access to a more reliable energy supply.

Ms Collard said upgrading Single Wire Earth Return (SWER) lines was a clear priority from the summit, with a huge push to improve the lines for more than 3,000 customers.

“We hear stories of farmers paying out of their own pocket to fix powerlines because they aren’t getting reliable electricity,” Ms Collard said.

“Storms and bushfires made worse and more frequent by climate change are really hard on rural electricity networks. We need governments to invest in local electricity upgrades to keep the network running properly.”

VFF (Victorian Farmers Federation) President, FCA board member and Quambatook farmer Brett Hosking said, rural Victorians are already making a significant contribution to the renewable energy shift by hosting transmission lines, wind turbines and solar farms, yet we don’t have the infrastructure in our communities to ensure reliable energy to our own homes and businesses.” 

“As farmers and stewards of the land we are already focused on how we can continue to produce food and fibre while reducing our emissions, but with the current poles and wires we can’t even charge an electric car.” 

“Poll after poll has shown rural and regional people support the energy shift, and we need governments to realise that upgrading our local energy network is part of that energy shift.” 


ENDS

Media Contact: Les White 0409805122 [email protected]


Contact details:

Les White: 0409 805 122 - [email protected]

More from this category

  • Energy, Environment
  • 15/12/2025
  • 00:01
RE-Alliance

Media Release: Energy roadmap shows renewables remain key and AEMO is starting to hear regional communities

For immediate release Monday 15 December 2025 A not-for-profit working for more than a decade with regional communities at the centre of Australia’s shift to renewable energy has welcomed the release of the Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO) draft Integrated System Plan (ISP) 2026. National Director of the Renewable Energy Alliance (RE-Alliance), Andrew Bray, said AEMO’s ISP is the most comprehensive pathway to energy security by 2050. “It may sound like a lot of acronyms, but AEMO’s ISP is as close as we’ve got to a national roadmap for how we’re going to keep the lights on as Australia’s ageing…

  • Energy, Government Federal
  • 15/12/2025
  • 00:01
ACOSS

No more excuses: Put people ahead of gas exporters

A broad range of consumer, industry and climate and environment organisations have called upon the Federal Government to put people ahead of gas exporters as the AlbaneseGovernment considers a new gas policy expected to be released any day. Kellie Caught, Program Director, Climate and Energy at ACOSS said “Australia’s focus on gas exports has tripled domestic gas and electricity prices, driving up inflation and household bills. Multinational gas corporations are posting huge profits while people on low incomes are skipping meals, not cooling homes, and going without medicines because they can’t afford their energy bills. “The government must implement gas…

  • Energy, Federal Budget
  • 14/12/2025
  • 06:00
Rewiring Australia

Battery boost welcome but loans are the missing link to slash bills for everyone

Rewiring Australia says the expansion of the home battery subsidy is a positive step, but accessible finance will be critical to ensure lower power bills are shared across the community. The Federal Government yesterday announced an expansion of its Cheaper Home Batteries program, which provides an upfront discount on eligible home battery systems to reduce installation costs for households and small businesses. Rewiring Australia CEO Francis Vierboom has welcomed the expansion while highlighting the need to ensure more households are able to participate as rebates reduce over coming years. “This announcement reflects the growing role household batteries play in an…

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.