Energy and Water Ombudsman Act 2006

LegislationReferenced in 4 bills

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Mineral and Energy Resources and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2020

This bill makes wide-ranging changes to Queensland's resources, energy, and water laws. It introduces industrial manslaughter offences for the mining and resources sector, reforms how the State manages mine rehabilitation and abandoned mines, tightens scrutiny of who can hold resource authorities, extends energy consumer protections, and increases transparency of water infrastructure charges in South East Queensland.

4/2/2020· PASSED with amendment· Hon A Lynham MP
Work & EmploymentEnvironmentCost of LivingBusiness & Economy
21

Energy and Water Ombudsman Amendment Bill 2015

This bill expands what the Energy and Water Ombudsman Queensland (EWOQ) can do. It opens the free dispute resolution service to small businesses with higher electricity use, lets EWOQ handle credit reporting complaints against energy and water providers, and fixes a small drafting error in another energy law.

15/9/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Bailey MP
Business & EconomyCost of LivingJustice & Rights
14

Electricity and Other Legislation (Batteries and Premium Feed-in Tariff) Amendment Bill 2017

This bill would have tightened the rules for Queensland's Solar Bonus Scheme, which pays a premium 44c/kWh feed-in tariff to over 280,000 homes and small businesses with eligible solar panels. It spelled out when adding a battery or extra solar would cause a customer to lose that tariff, and it also opened up retail electricity competition for customers in embedded networks like apartment buildings. The bill lapsed when Parliament was dissolved and did not become law.

15/6/2017· Lapsed· Hon M Bailey MP
Cost of LivingEnvironmentHousing & Renting

Electricity and Other Legislation (Batteries and Premium Feed-in Tariff) Amendment Bill 2018

This bill sets clear rules for Queensland's 240,000 Solar Bonus Scheme customers on how they can install batteries and extra solar panels without losing their 44c/kWh feed-in tariff. It also opens up retail competition for customers in embedded electricity networks and lets regional Queensland households and small businesses switch back to Ergon Retail.

15/2/2018· PASSED with amendment· Hon A Lynham MP
Cost of LivingEnvironmentRegional Queensland
19