Queensland Competition Authority

OrganisationReferenced in 8 bills

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Debt Reduction and Savings Bill 2021

This bill implements Queensland's Savings and Debt Plan by restructuring several government bodies and transferring the Titles Registry to a government-owned company within the Queensland Future Fund. It also introduces a fee unit model for regulatory fees, requires government agencies to publish online instead of in print, and makes safety improvements to tattoo ink regulation.

25/3/2021· PASSED with amendment· Hon C Dick MP
Government & ElectionsBusiness & EconomyHealth
77

Local Government (Empowering Councils) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2025

This bill reforms Queensland's local government laws to give councils and mayors more authority, simplify the councillor conduct and conflicts of interest frameworks, and cut red tape across a range of council operations. It responds to concerns from the local government sector about unnecessary regulatory burden, particularly around conduct complaints, mandatory training, and disaster recovery decision-making during election caretaker periods.

20/11/2025· PASSED with amendment· Hon A Leahy MP
Government & ElectionsRegional QueenslandFirst Nations
13

Queensland Productivity Commission Bill 2015

This bill establishes the Queensland Productivity Commission as an independent body that advises the Treasurer on productivity, economic development and industry. It holds public inquiries when directed, investigates competitive neutrality complaints about government-run businesses, and takes over these functions from the Queensland Competition Authority.

15/9/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon C Pitt MP
Government & ElectionsBusiness & Economy
10

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

Queensland Competition Authority Amendment Bill 2018

This bill updates Queensland's rules for when businesses can access major infrastructure like rail networks, coal terminals, and ports. It aligns the state's access regime with national competition standards following reviews by the Productivity Commission and the federal Competition Policy Review, and makes the Queensland Competition Authority more accountable when processing applications.

15/2/2018· PASSED· Hon J Trad MP
Business & EconomyGovernment & Elections
13

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

Agriculture and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015

This bill updates 10 Queensland agriculture laws with mostly technical changes — clearing the way for drone-based crop spraying, tightening controls on feeding animal products to livestock, speeding up exotic disease responses, simplifying pet microchip rules, and realigning company director liability with national principles. It also stops the automatic repeal of rules that manage the state's 38 remaining forest reserves, keeping them in place until those lands can be transferred to new tenures.

14/7/2015· PASSED· Hon W Byrne MP
Regional QueenslandEnvironmentBusiness & Economy
9

Water (Local Management Arrangements) Amendment Bill 2016

This bill changes Queensland's water laws to let SunWater's regional channel irrigation schemes be handed over to new entities owned and run by the irrigators who use them. It sets up a formal transfer process, starting with the Emerald, Eton, St George and Theodore schemes, and provides tax exemptions, staff protections and rules for moving assets, contracts and licences across to the new operators.

13/9/2016· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Bailey MP
Regional QueenslandBusiness & EconomyEnvironment