Skip to content
Energy, Government NSW

NSW electrification program will reduce energy bills and emissions: Rewiring Australia

Rewiring Australia < 1 mins read

A household electrification program announced today will reduce energy bills for low income households in NSW while tackling the climate crisis, according to Rewiring Australia.

 

More than 24,000 social housing tenants will receive grants for upgrades including solar PV, hot water systems, ceiling fans, reverse-cycle air conditioners, insulation and draught proofing. 

 

The grants worth a total of $175 million over four years will be jointly funded by the NSW and Commonwealth governments.

 

“We are delighted that Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Premier Chris Minns have taken up our policy to provide grants to electrify social housing properties,” said Rewiring Australia Executive Director Dan Cass.

 

“Household electrification is the fastest, most cost effective way to reduce emissions - and it also decreases the cost of living by significantly reducing energy bills.

 

“Targeting social homes is necessary to ensure everyone benefits from the bounty of renewable energy regardless of their income.”

 

The Commonwealth government is also helping apartment residents access cheaper solar energy by subsidising rooftop solar installations and providing grants for purchasing a slice of a solar farm. 

 

“This is important because 21.7% of dwellings in NSW are apartments and people who live there can’t simply install a solar system on their roof like people in a separate house,” said Dan Cass.

 

“As the climate emergency and cost of living crisis worsen, governments will need to invest big in electrification policies like this, to slash bills and emissions at the same time.”


Contact details:

Charlie Moore: 0452 606 171 

More from this category

  • Community, Government NSW
  • 02/02/2026
  • 10:29
Homelessness NSW

Clarification

A Homelessness NSW media release published on Friday 30 January stated that the NSW Government is spending less on social housing than in 2018. Homelessness NSW’s release should have clarified that this relates only to net recurrent expenditure, as reported by the Productivity Commission in its Report on Government Services 2026. Alongside recurrent expenditure, the NSW Government also funds capital investment. In 2024-25 the combined recurrent and capital spending came to $2.772b, an increase from $2.281b 2018. We acknowledge the $6.1b allocated in the 2024-25 Budget for social housing.

  • Energy, Oil Mining Resources
  • 02/02/2026
  • 06:00
The Joint Union Campaign to Save Myuna Colliery

‘Low blow’ – Myuna coal miners call on Origin CEO to save their jobs

Three hundred coalmineworkers at Centennial’s Myuna Colliery are calling on Origin CEO Frank Calabria to save their jobs and continue to buy coal for Eraring Power Station locally until its closure in 2029. Thousands of workers, families and community members have so far signed a petition directed at Mr Calabria; and unions representing Myuna workers are gearing up for a week of action to save 300 direct jobs and a further 1800 jobs in the supply chain and community the mine supports. Despite Origin’s announcement that Eraring will now stay open until 2029, the clock is ticking for its captured…

  • Community, Government NSW
  • 30/01/2026
  • 14:26
Homelessness NSW

NSW is failing on social housing

Damning new data shows the NSW government is spending less on social housing than in 2018, prompting calls for urgent investment as the housing crisis worsens. A new report by the Productivity Commission finds NSW spent $1.57 billion on social housing in 2025, down from $1.69 billion in 2018. Latest figures put the number of social homes in NSW at 159,598 in 2024, a tiny increase of only 9,490 since 2016 which falls well behind population growth. The proportion of social housing in NSW has dropped from 4.9% in 2016, to 4.6% of total NSW housing stock in 2021. Vee…

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.