H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Never waste a fuel crisis: the Albanese government must seize the moment and start taxing gas companies | Greg Jericho

about 12 hours ago
A picture


The first rule of politics is to never waste a crisis,The current fuel crisis due to the Iran war is one the Australian government needs to seize,The old political concerns about taxing gas companies are now dead,Should the Albanese government fail to act it should not be surprised if voters angry at rising petrol, gas and electricity prices begin to look elsewhere,Earlier this month, the independent senator David Pocock asked the Senate if it was true that Australians paid more in beer excise than gas companies did in the petroleum resources rent tax (PRRT).

It was true, drinkers of beer, spirits, cider or pre-mixed drinks are all paying more tax.Heck, even smokers still pay more excise than gas companies pay PRRT:If the graph does not display click hereThat Pocock made this point is not shocking but the public support for his position highlights just how far and quickly the narrative has shifted.Way back in 2014, I wrote a column explaining how the opening of the Gladstone LNG terminal would send our gas prices higher.It was based on work by the Australia Institute senior economist Matt Grudnoff’s paper Fracking the Future.Within six months of LNG production in Gladstone starting, wholesale gas prices in the east and south-east of Australia more than doubled and, because gas prices link to electricity prices, they also rose:If the graph does not display click hereAfter the start of Russia’s war on Ukraine, prices here spiked due to nothing other than the world price of gas soaring.

This might not have been a problem were it not for the fact that Australia, unlike most energy-exporting nations, does not tax our LNG exports in any serious way.This goes to the crux of Pocock’s point – our LNG exports have soared but PRRT revenue has not:If the graph does not display click hereAs a result, gas companies have spent the past few years absolutely laughing.Since the invasion of Ukraine, gas exporters in Australia have taken in an estimated $128bn more revenue than they would have, had prices remained at previous levels.If the graph does not display click hereBecause windfall profits are by their very nature unexpected, taxing them does not affect business decisions in any way – and yet the Albanese government has thus far refused to tax them.In the past, that might have been politically beneficial – after all, the gas industry has been very good at suggesting it is necessary for the economy.

And yet while the industry takes in around 8% of all operating profits, it only pays around 0.5% of all wages in the private sector:If the graph does not display click hereFor many years there have been a few of us calling for better taxing of gas companies, but it was a pretty lonely spot.Now, however, the ACTU is calling for a 25% tax on gas exports (full disclosure, I assisted with some of the research behind the report that found it would raise around $17bn a year).This is supported by Pocock.And he has plenty of company.

The Greens are on board and independent MP Allegra Spender, who has just released her own tax white paper, is also calling for a windfall tax on gas,Zali Steggall knows the gas industry is taking us for a ride and Kate Chaney has long been calling for a proper tax on gas,Even One Nation has announced it wants to massively increase the level of royalties paid by the gas industry,We now have a situation where the ACTU, the Greens, independents and One Nation are all calling for either a tax on gas or for the industry to pay much, much more,And it is not surprising.

A recent poll showed that One Nation voters were the most strongly in favour of a 25% tax on gas exports:If the graph does not display click hereThe political calculus has changed.What previously would have been seen as a risky option is now seen as sensible.And as fuel prices rise across the country, the sense that Australians are missing out will only grow, and with that will come more anger at a government that fails to act.Last week Monique Ryan asked the treasurer if the government would introduce a tax on gas “to capture windfall profits from conflicts like those in Ukraine and Iran”.Jim Chalmers replied that the government had already “made some changes to the PRRT”.

Except, when those changes were announced in the May 2023 budget, the gas industry celebrated and, unsurprisingly, the estimates of PRRT have since fallen drastically, putting a lie to the treasurer’s line that the gas industry now pays “extra billions of dollars sooner”:If the graph does not display click hereSo it would seem the government is not for turning.But last week, in a mostly unreported speech in parliament, government backbench MP Ed Husic absolutely let fly.He told parliament “we don’t have a shortage of supply, we have a glut of greed”.Pointedly he noted: “Australian politics has got to acknowledge the red-hot anger that exists about the greed of gas companies felt by voters of all political persuasions.”This is a key issue.

Voters over the past two elections have very quickly realised that no one owns their vote – there is no such thing as a safe seat any more, and they want politicians who listen.It is time for the government to stop being afraid of the gas industry.Australians have woken up to the greed and how we are being ripped off.Failure to act in the May budget could very quickly make voters who are angry at gas companies realise their real anger is at the government.Greg Jericho is a Guardian columnist and chief economist at the Australia Institute
technologySee all
A picture

Subnautica 2 publisher’s CEO used ChatGPT in failed bid to avoid paying US$250m bonus to own studio head, court hears

A South Korean gaming publisher who hatched a plan using ChatGPT to remove the heads of one of its own game studios in a bid to avoid paying US$250m has been ordered by a US court to reverse the removal.The dispute stems from South Korean game developer Krafton’s acquisition of Unknown Worlds Entertainment, makers of the Subnautica video game, for $500m in 2021.Krafton agreed the studio would remain independent and that its leadership would retain operational control and could only be fired for cause, according to the ruling by vice-chancellor Lori Will of the court of chancery in Delaware.If Unknown Worlds met certain targets, Krafton would pay the studio what is known as an earnout worth up to $250m.As the studio was last year ramping up to release Subnautica 2, internal projections showed it would trigger the earnout, according to the ruling

1 day ago
A picture

UK must learn lessons from AI race and retain its quantum computing talent, says minister

The UK will not let quantum computing talent slip through its fingers and must learn lessons from US dominance of the AI race, the technology secretary has said, as the government announced a £1bn quantum funding pledge.Liz Kendall said the government hoped to retain homegrown quantum startups, engineers and researchers rather than lose them to competing countries, with the US stealing a march on its western rivals in AI.“I do look at what’s happened on AI,” said Kendall. “I do think we need to learn the lessons and make sure we give our brilliant scientists, spinouts and startups the ability to stay here and make it happen. And that requires a government that is bold and ambitious and confident in these technologies of the future

2 days ago
A picture

Child abuse material ‘systemic’ on Elon Musk’s X amid Grok scandal, Australian online safety regulator warned

The Australian online safety regulator warned Elon Musk’s X amid the Grok sexualised image generation scandal that it found child abuse material was “particularly systemic” on X and more accessible than on “any other mainstream service”, correspondence obtained by Guardian Australia reveals.The eSafety commissioner wrote to X in January after its chatbot, Grok, was used to generate sexualised images of women and children online, which the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, described as “abhorrent”.In the letter, obtained by Guardian Australia under freedom of information laws, eSafety’s general manager of regulatory operations, Heidi Snell, pointed to Musk’s promise when taking over the platform in 2022 that “removing child exploitation is priority #1”, but said “the availability of CSEM [child sexual exploitation material] continues to appear particularly systemic on X”.“eSafety has not identified CSEM to be as readily accessible on any other mainstream service,” Snell said.eSafety had found that while action by X to tackle bot accounts in October 2025 had reduced use of some previously commonly used hashtags and terms to advertise CSEM, eSafety found hashtags to advertise the material still prevalent

2 days ago
A picture

Teenage girls sue Musk’s xAI, accusing Grok tool of creating child sexual abuse material

A group of three teenage girls, two of whom are minors, filed a lawsuit on Monday against Elon Musk’s xAI artificial intelligence company alleging that its Grok image generator used photos of them to produce and distribute child sexual abuse material. The class-action lawsuit is the first filed by minors following Grok’s rampant generation of nonconsensual nude images earlier this year.“xAI chose to profit off the sexual predation of real people, including children, despite knowing full well the consequences of creating such a dangerous product,” Vanessa Baehr-Jones, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said in a statement.The suit, which was brought by three Tennessee teenagers but filed in California, where xAI is headquartered, details how the girls discovered that nude, AI-altered images of them were uploaded to a Discord server and shared online without their knowledge.After they alerted law enforcement to the images, according to the complaint, police arrested a suspect later that month and found child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on his phone that was allegedly produced using xAI’s image and video generation technology

2 days ago
A picture

Google scraps AI search feature that crowdsourced amateur medical advice

Google has dropped a new artificial intelligence search feature that gave users crowdsourced health advice from amateurs around the world.The company had said its launch of “What People Suggest”, which provided tips from strangers, showed “the potential of AI to transform health outcomes across the globe”.But Google has since quietly removed the feature, according to three people familiar with the decision.A Google spokesperson confirmed “What People Suggest” had been scrapped. The move came as part of a “broader simplification” of its search page and had nothing to do with the quality or safety of the new feature, the spokesperson said

3 days ago
A picture

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra review: its huge screen blocks shoulder surfers from spying on you

Samsung’s latest Ultra superphone promises to keep shoulder surfers out of your business with a first-of-its-kind privacy display built into its huge 6.9in screen.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more

3 days ago
trendingSee all
A picture

War in Middle East has ‘heightened the risks to the global economy’; markets in ‘panic mode’ as oil jumps and shares fall – as it happened

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Never waste a fuel crisis: the Albanese government must seize the moment and start taxing gas companies | Greg Jericho

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Inside the fiery, deadly crashes involving the Tesla Cybertruck

about 13 hours ago
A picture

Instagram to remove end-to-end encryption for private messages in May

about 22 hours ago
A picture

The WNBA’s new labor deal explained: what it means for pay, power and the league’s future

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Oh deer! Rory McIlroy puts elk on the Masters champions dinner menu

about 8 hours ago