Skip to content
Energy, Environment

Monash expert: Free electricity under Solar Sharer Scheme – what it means for households

Monash University 2 mins read

A Monash University expert is available to comment on the Federal Government’s new Solar Sharer scheme requiring energy retailers to provide households in select states with three hours of free electricity each day, how it is good for consumers and what other measures could help share the benefits of the energy transition.

 

Professor Yolande Strengers, Director (Research) Monash Energy Institute, Faculty of Information Technology

Contact details: +61 450 501 248 or [email protected]  

Read more of Professor Strengers’ commentary at Monash Lens

  • Energy futures
  • Smart homes and energy automation 
  • Smart energy grids
  • Consumer energy resources

 

The following can be attributed to Professor Strengers:

“Offering free energy through this solar power sharing initiative ensures that more Australians are experiencing the benefits of the transition to renewable energy sources. This is important for renters, apartment dwellers and many other households who are not able to afford or access solar energy on their property.

 

“Our research shows that the concept of sharing energy is appealing to many households and is aligned with community values to support the efficient operation of the grid by using energy when it is available. 

 

“Households have long associated the evening as the cheap time to use energy and make use of off-peak rates. That is changing with the high penetration of rooftop solar generation. This policy is a signal to households that using energy in the middle of the day is the best way to make use of abundant solar energy. This might include running dishwashers, washing machines, charging large appliances and electric vehicles, or cooling the home on a hot day.

 

“Giving people free power during the middle of the day is a positive initiative that supports a more equitable sharing of the benefits of the energy transition between solar and non-solar households. While it’s not a silver bullet, and while not everyone can shift their energy use to the middle of the day, it is a move towards sharing the collective benefits of the energy transition with more households.”

For any other topics on which you may be seeking expert comment, contact the Monash University Media Unit on +61 3 9903 4840 or [email protected]

More from this category

  • Environment, Women
  • 05/03/2026
  • 12:00
Bush Heritage Australia & Trust for Nature

NEW INTERNSHIP TO SUPPORT EMERGING WOMEN AND GENDER DIVERSE CONSERVATIONISTS

Bush Heritage Australia and Trust for Nature have announced a collaborative internship designed to open new pathways for women and gender diverse early career conservationists. Women remain underrepresented across many STEM fields in Australia. In 2024 the proportion of women in STEM-qualified occupations had plateaued at 15 percent. While environmental science performs much better than the broader STEM sector in gender representation, equity has not yet been consistently achieved or sustained. The Bush Heritage and Trust for Nature Conservation Internship aims to directly address this gap by providing practical experience, professional networks and clearer entry points into conservation careers. Bush…

  • Environment
  • 05/03/2026
  • 11:36
Greenpeace Australia Pacific

Greenpeace welcomes WA Government’s starting plan for renewable energy projects to pay their way, but the real costs should be borne by oil and gas industry

SYDNEY, Thursday 5 March 2026 — The WA Government has released their Community Benefit Guidelines outlining the expectations on renewable energy companies paying their fair share to local communities hosting wind turbines and solar panels.Big gas corporations like Chevron and Woodside recently announced annual profits in the billions, while the WA Government is expected to receive only $365 million in total royalties for the 2025-'26 financial year.That amounts to only 0.7 per cent of WA’s revenue with further declines expected. Most oil and gas operations are currently not required to pay any royalties at all to WA. Geoff Bice, WA…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Travel Tourism
  • 05/03/2026
  • 11:06
Divers for Climate

Thirty weedy seadragons in a single dive: What South Australia’s divers are seeing underwater

South Australia’s harmful algal bloom has entered its second year, local divers are witnessing dramatic shifts in marine life. A national community of dive…

  • Contains:

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.