Wholesale Electricity Price Crash Threatens Renewable Energy Investment, Experts Warn
Breaking: Wholesale Power Prices Plummet, Stalling New Wind and Solar Projects
Wholesale electricity prices have dropped to critically low levels, failing to provide a viable investment signal for new generation capacity or even maintain existing plants, energy market analysts warn.

Current spot market pricing is creating a 'mirage' that misrepresents the true cost and value of renewable energy development, industry experts told Renew Economy.
The crisis spotlights a widening gap between short-term market signals and long-term infrastructure needs.
Quote from Experts
"Low wholesale prices reflect oversupply during certain hours, but they do not cover the full cost of building and operating new wind or solar farms," said Dr. Emily Thornton, an energy economist at the University of Melbourne.
"Investors see no clear financial incentive to commit capital to new capacity, which could undermine Australia's renewable energy transition."
"We're facing a fundamental mismatch between the market's current signals and what's needed for future generation," added Mark Reynolds, a senior consultant at Energy Policy Australia.
"The spot price simply does not reimburse the fixed costs of generation, let alone the capital expenditure required for new projects."
See also: Background on the electricity spot market
Background: The Spot Market Mirage
The wholesale electricity market, which determines prices in real-time, has seen a sustained decline in average prices due to increased renewable generation and demand shifts.
While lower spot prices benefit consumers in the short term, they erode revenue for generators, particularly older coal and gas plants that once relied on high price spikes to remain profitable.
Wind and solar projects, which have low operating costs, also depend on occasional high wholesale prices to recover their development and construction costs. Without these price spikes, new projects cannot secure financing.
"The market is sending a false signal that new generation is not needed, but that ignores reliability and future demand growth," Thornton explained.

The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) has flagged concerns that low wholesale prices could delay necessary investment in dispatchable power.
Policy Gap Widens
Current market design, originally created for fossil fuel baseload power, is struggling to accommodate the intermittent nature of renewables.
"We need a revised framework that values availability, not just energy delivered," Reynolds said.
Government subsidies and contracts for difference have helped some projects, but the overall investment signal from the spot market remains too weak.
What This Means: The Future of Renewable Energy Hangs in the Balance
If low wholesale prices persist, the pipeline of new wind and solar installations could stall, threatening state and federal emissions targets.
Existing generators may also retire early if they cannot cover operating costs, risking reliability gaps in the transition period.
"The market is effectively telling us that building new capacity is not profitable under current rules," Thornton noted. "That is a dangerous message for our energy security."
Analysts recommend implementing capacity markets or minimum price floors to ensure generators receive sufficient revenue to stay in operation and incentivize new builds.
The urgency is high: without reform, Australia could face a 'renewable gap' where demand outstrips supply while the transition remains incomplete.
"We cannot rely on the spot price alone to guide investment," Reynolds concluded. "Policy makers must act now to restore a credible investment signal."
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