This fact sheet briefly explains our final findings and recommendations in relation to a fair and reasonable solar feed-in tariff, and discusses how an unsubsidised feed-in tariff should be implemented in NSW.
IPART has today released a determination on a ‘fair and reasonable’ feed-in tariff from 1 July 2012 for NSW consumers who have, or are thinking about installing solar electricity sources such as solar photovoltaic units (PV units) that feed electr
This fact sheet briefly explains our final findings and recommendations in relation to a fair and reasonable solar feed-in tariff, and discusses how an unsubsidised feed-in tariff should be implemented in NSW.
This fact sheet briefly explains our draft findings and recommendations in relation to a fair and reasonable solar feed-in tariff, and discusses how an unsubsidised feed-in tariff should be implemented in NSW.
IPART has published its solar feed-in tariff guide for customers in 2022-23. Customers can expect to receive 6.2 to 10.4 c/kWh from their electricity retailer for the solar exports they feed into the grid.
The Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) has today released its draft decisions on average regulated retail gas prices for 2014-16 and the benchmark range of solar feed-in tariffs in 2014/15, and is seeking public comment.
The Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) has today released its draft decisions on average regulated retail gas prices for 2014-16 and the benchmark range of solar feed-in tariffs in 2014/15, and is seeking public comment.
This final report explains our final recommendations and findings in relation to the fair and reasonable value for electricity generated by small-scale solar PV units in NSW.
This fact sheet briefly summarises our key findings on the characteristics of PV units in NSW, and discusses what we considered to be the key messages for PV customers.
Under section 43ECA of the Electricity Supply Act 1995 (NSW), the Minister has referred to IPART the determination of the benchmark range for feed-in tariffs paid by retailers for solar PV exports.
From 1 July 2012 the NSW Government will require all retailers to pay some of the costs of the statutory feed-in tariff which is paid to eligible customers under the Solar Bonus Scheme (the retailer contribution).