NSW & Commonwealth double incentives for batteries

The Minns and Albanese Labor Governments have teamed up to double the incentives available for NSW households and small businesses to install a solar battery and connect it to a Virtual Power Plant, providing almost $5,000 in upfront benefits for a typical system that unlocks long-term cost-of living reductions.

The Australian Government’s $2.3 billion Cheaper Home Batteries Program will support households and small businesses with a discount on the cost of installing small-scale battery systems. This will reduce the cost of a typical installed battery by around 30 per cent, making this support around double the current incentive available to NSW consumers.

The Minns Labor Government will now almost double its incentive for households and businesses to connect their solar battery to a Virtual Power Plant. It will stack with the Commonwealth solar battery incentive, to unlock more cost-of-living relief.

From 1 July 2025, the Minns Labor Government is increasing the incentive to up to $1,500 to encourage more households and small businesses to install a battery and connect to a Virtual Power Plant. The incentive varies by the size of the battery.

It means NSW households and businesses will be able to access double the current incentive for installing a battery (through the Commonwealth program) and double the current incentive for registering it with a Virtual Power Plant (through the NSW scheme).

For example, if a household installs a typical 11.5 kWh system, the combined support would be almost $5,000. If the household installs a larger 27 kWh battery, which costs just over $30,000 without support, it will receive a discount of around $10,000 from the Commonwealth program. If it then connects the battery to a Virtual Power Plant, it will receive an upfront payment of almost $1,500 from the NSW scheme.

Virtual Power Plants are connected groups of solar powered batteries owned by households and small businesses. Connecting to a Virtual Power Plant allows them to generate revenue on an ongoing basis by selling the excess energy stored in their battery to their neighbours and community when demand on the grid is high.

Virtual Power Plants also reduce demand on the electricity grid, which makes the state’s energy supply more stable and less prone to outages. This prevents price spikes and drives down the price of electricity for everyone, while taking us closer to our Net Zero targets.

The increased Virtual Power Plant incentive will replace the NSW home battery installation incentive which has been doubled by the Commonwealth program.

The NSW Government incentive for solar batteries has been a huge success, with more than 11,400 battery installations in six months.

Anyone with a compatible solar battery, including those installed under the NSW incentive since November, who has not yet taken up the Virtual Power Plant incentive, is eligible for the newly doubled incentive from 1 July.

The Clean Energy Regulator is responsible for ensuring the safe installation of home batteries under the Commonwealth’s Cheaper Home Batteries Program, including the eligibility of products and accreditation of installers. The program builds on Australia’s well established and successful rollout of rooftop solar, which has seen more than 4 million solar installations and one-in-three homes harness sunshine for their power.

The NSW Government will continue working with stakeholders on future opportunities for the NSW Peak Demand Reduction Scheme, including considering what new activities could be incentivised.

Minister for Climate Change and Energy, Chris Bowen:

“NSW is world leading when it comes to generating rooftop solar power – and attaching more batteries to soak up our sunshine and store that energy will be good for bills and good for the grid.

“We’re working with the Minns Labor Government to make sure more homes and small businesses can slash their bills by installing a battery and connecting it to a Virtual Power Plant.

“The Albanese and Minns Labor Governments are teaming up to double the benefits available to NSW households and small businesses. We’ll help more people in NSW access cheap, fast and safe solar energy in their homes and businesses night or day, when they need it.”

NSW Minister for Climate Change and Energy, Penny Sharpe:

“We know the best benefit for the grid comes when these batteries are linked together, and NSW wants to be world-leading in encouraging households and small businesses to be a part of that.

“The Minns Labor Government is working with the Albanese Government to double the current benefit available when you install a solar battery and connect it to a Virtual Power Plant.

“By increasing battery uptake we’re reducing demand on the whole grid, putting downward pressure on bills for everyone.”

Further information for media:

What is a Virtual Power Plant (VPP) and how does it work?

  • VPPs are connected groups of solar powered batteries owned by households and small businesses that allow excess stored power to be sold to the electricity grid.
  • There is no extra physical connection – the VPP is operated remotely by the VPP provider.
  • The VPP provider remotely tracks available energy and uses it based on the contracted conditions agreed to by the consumer.
  • The VPP passes on the financial benefits directly to the consumer.

What are the benefits of joining a Virtual Power Plant?

  • Get an upfront payment through the NSW Government’s incentive. The amount depends on the battery size. For a 27 kWh battery, this could be up to $1,500.
  • Continue to make money selling the battery’s excess stored electricity.
  • Electricity sold from batteries connected to a VPP has the potential to attract a higher price than electricity sold through grid-connected solar because of higher power prices at night.
  • Earning money helps pay off solar panels and battery faster.
  • Help manage peaks in electricity demand to keep power costs down and the lights on, and decrease NSW’s reliance on fossil fuels.

How do battery owners join a Virtual Power Plant?

  • Connect through a NSW Government Accredited Certificate Provider to receive an upfront payment. For a list of providers visit the NSW Climate and Energy Action website.
  • Pricing, timing and other conditions of the VPP will be set by a contract with the provider.
  • Not all batteries can be connected to a VPP, so check before you purchase. All batteries that were installed through the NSW Peak Demand Reduction Scheme can be connected.
  • If you are looking to install a battery with a discount, find out more about the Australian Government’s Cheaper Home Batteries Program available from 1 July 2025 by visiting the Cheaper Home Batteries Program web page.

Chris Minns’ Moore Park play – all spin, no sport

Secret government documents obtained by the Opposition through a call for papers from Greater Sydney Parklands have confirmed what we all suspected – Chris Minns’ promise of new football fields at Moore Park was never real.

While the Premier stood in Parliament and in front of cameras telling families he’d deliver more places to play sport, his own officials were warning the opposite.

The email put it plainly – 

“There is nothing in this for community sport… all sports codes need to know… not to be fooled.”

That says it all.

Internal maps show that building playing fields would mean “mass tree clearing” and that the “community would not cop this”. So instead of footy fields, locals can look forward to a walking track, a couple of benches, and maybe a slippery dip, if they’re lucky.

Leader of the Opposition Mark Speakman said Chris Minns keeps making announcements but never delivers. 

“This was never a plan, it was a headline,” Mr Speakman said. 

Shadow Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Scott Farlow said this is what happens when a government is run off media releases instead of actual plans.

“It’s a thought bubble, not a policy,” Mr Farlow said. 

Shadow Minister for Sport Eleni Petinos said sporting clubs were promised fields.  

“Our sporting groups are getting spin. This isn’t support for grassroots sport — it’s a PR stunt dressed up as a win,” Ms Petinos said.  

There is a practical, balanced plan on the table from the Moore Park Coalition. More public space, better facilities, and the 18-hole course kept intact. Chris Minns threw it out for a photo op.

It’s rinse and repeat with this government — announce, spin, backpedal, repeat. And communities are left wondering when they’ll actually see something delivered.

Homelessness NSW endorses budget investment but calls for greater scale

The NSW Government’s $30.4 million investment will provide some immediate relief for overwhelmed homelessness services, but investment at a scale that matches the magnitude of the housing crisis is still needed.

The funding package includes $20 million to expand crisis and transitional housing and $10.4 million over four years for The Rev. Bill Crews Foundation.

Homelessness NSW CEO Dom Rowe said the investment provides some immediate relief for overwhelmed services but emphasised the need for much greater long-term commitment.

“This $30.4 million provides breathing room for frontline services, but we must be clear about the magnitude of the challenge we face,” Ms Rowe said.

“The 2025 Street Count showed an eight per cent increase in rough sleeping to 2,192 people, compared to 2,037 people in 2024. Around 68,000 Australians sought help from specialist homelessness services in NSW in 2023-24, with many turned away due to overwhelming demand.

“Homelessness services across the state are overwhelmed. They cannot help everyone and must make heartbreaking decisions about who to turn away. This should not be happening in one of the wealthiest places on Earth.”

Ending the homelessness crisis requires greater structural change.

“Today’s announcement will provide breathing room, but it’s a band-aid on a much larger wound. The state’s worsening housing crisis is forcing more people to bed down on streets because they can’t afford the broken rental market.”

Homelessness NSW is calling on the state government to:

Increase social housing stock from 4.7% to 10%

Deliver a 30% increase in baseline funding for specialist homelessness services

“With over 65,000 households on the social housing waitlist and wait times up to 10 years, we need bold action that matches the scale of this crisis,” Ms Rowe said.

“Every person sleeping rough tonight deserves better. We need sustained, substantial investment at the scale that matches the crisis we’re facing.”

Man charged after allegedly deliberately setting home and vehicles on fire in Warners Bay

A man will face court today charged after allegedly deliberately setting a house, car and motorcycle on fire at Lake Macquarie overnight.

Just after 11pm yesterday (Monday 9 June 2025), emergency services were called to a home on Margaret Street, Warners Bay, following reports of a house fire.

Fire and Rescue NSW attended and found a house, SUV, and a motorcycle well alight. They worked to extinguish the blaze; however, the property was destroyed.

The property was unoccupied at this time and there are no reports of injury.

Officers attached to Lake Macquarie Police District established a crime scene and commenced investigations into the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Following inquiries, about 3.05am today (Tuesday 10 June 2025), officers were called to a service station on Lake Road, Argenton, and arrested a 47-year-old man at the scene.

He was taken to Belmont Police Station where he was charged with damage property by fire/explosive greater than $15000 (DV).

The man was refused bail to appear before Belmont Local Court today (Tuesday 10 June 2025).

Minns’ one idea on illegal tobacco goes up in smoke

After a year of silence, where NSW has witnessed a dramatic increase in illegal tobacco shops and associated criminal violence, Chris Minns on Monday finally offered up a solitary idea to fix the problem – “make cigarettes cheaper”. 

Yesterday, the Federal Treasurer shot down the Premier’s idea saying he didn’t think making cigarettes cheaper was the answer and that the focus needed to be on compliance. 

Leader of the Opposition Mark Speakman said that under Chris Minns, NSW has become the Chop Chop capital of Australia.  

“Illegal tobacco businesses have exploded under Chris Minns, and organised criminal gangs are raking in big money, because they know NSW has minimal enforcement and some of the weakest penalties in the country.” 

“While other states have acted to drastically increase penalties and improve enforcement, Chris Minns has been missing in action. Now that the Federal Treasurer has ruled out changes to the federal excise, Chris Minns needs to tell people how he is going to tackle this issue,” said Mr Speakman. 

Shadow Minister for Health Kellie Sloane said Chris Minns has only woken up to this issue after illegal tobacco shops started popping up in his own electorate.

“We’ve been telling the Minns Government for a year that this is a serious issue, but they have been dragging their feet. The Opposition have pushed for stronger illegal tobacco penalties, a fit and proper person test to stop criminals getting tobacco licences and a parliamentary inquiry into this issue,” said Ms Sloane. 

Shadow Minister for Regional Health Gurmesh Singh says regional communities are bearing the brunt of the tobacco wars and Chris Minns needed to step up. 

“We’ve seen fire bombings, stand over tactics, violence and legitimate small businesses put under pressure due to the rise in illegal tobacco. The lack of enforcement in regional communities means that these criminals can illegal tobacco with little fear of getting caught.” 

Shadow Minister for Police Paul Toole said once again the NSW Police Force are being called in as the last line of defence to pick up the slack because of the failures of the Minns Labor Government and NSW Health to deal with illegal tobacco here in this state.

“The NSW Labor Government is treating the NSW Police Force like a dogsbody to pick up the pieces after other agencies fail to their job.

The NSW Police force is stretched paper-thin and passing the buck to the police cannot be this Government’s answer to every issue,” Mr Toole said.

Inquiry will now do what Labor wouldn’t – show the modelling and show the truth

Today the Upper House has stood up for the people of New South Wales — not for spin, not for backroom deals, and not for rushed legislation.

The motion for an inquiry was carried on the voices with the Government not calling for a division to avoid labor MPs ashamed of their position being forced to have their names recorded on the vote or worse still crossing the floor.

A proper inquiry will now be established — because when you’re dealing with the livelihoods of every worker and the future costs to every business in this state, you don’t get to say “trust us.” You show your homework.

This was never about 1 July. That deadline is a political invention, not a legal obligation. And today on Sky News, the Treasurer himself admitted there is no impact on the state budget this financial year. As to 2025-26 premiums, they’ve already been set.

In the Legislative Assembly the Opposition voted for the bill on the second reading. If the Government had treated the Opposition’s amendments in a satisfactory way, we would have voted for the bill on the third reading too. On the Government’s own figures, an amended bill through both Houses would have delivered most of their projected savings immediately, without adjusting WPI thresholds. In addition are savings provided by the Opposition’s extra proposals.

Instead the Government, having sat on a deteriorating scheme until the last moment, wants to stop longer term support for severely psychologically injured workers without explaining its workings, releasing the modelling, or ever levelling with the people who will carry the cost — workers, families, and small business owners.

What’s at stake here are real lives.

The teacher, still standing at the whiteboard long after the bell, juggling lesson plans and parent emails, now fearful of being exploited by deepfake technology.

The nurse stepping into a second shift without hesitation — because her patients don’t get to take breaks.

The Service NSW worker on the frontline after a flood, handing over a grant cheque to someone who’s lost everything — no cameras, just care.

These are the people who kept NSW going through fire, flood and pandemic. And now, without modelling, without facts, and without fairness, Labor tried to rewrite the rules on them and got caught.

This isn’t reform. It’s cover. A government trying to hide its own failure to manage a budget, trading in secrecy and panic over transparency and truth.

The NSW Opposition will always support reform that is fair, sustainable and built on integrity. But we will never rubber-stamp legislation written in haste, driven by internal panic, and enforced through political muscle instead of public trust.

Opposition Leader Mark Speakman said today was about restoring process in the nation’s oldest Parliament.

“Workers, families and business deserve clarity — not confusion, chaos or spin. Today’s decision means the truth can finally come out,” Mr Speakman said.

Shadow Treasurer Damien Tudehope said the Treasurer’s own words on Sky News undermined every claim made to justify the rushed legislation.

“Why the secrecy? If the numbers stacked up, Labor would have shown them. Now the inquiry will deliver what the government wouldn’t — answers,” Mr Tudehope said.

For workers, for businesses, for the entire NSW community — today was a step towards restoring trust.

And for every person who’s felt left out of this process, the Parliament heard you.

Police should not investigate police over Blak deaths in custody

The Australian Greens call for an independent inquiry into the death of 24 year old Kumanjayi White, a Warlpiri man with a disability, in Alice Springs on the 27th May 2025.

We acknowledge the profound grief and anger felt by Kumanjayi White’s family, the Warlpiri and Yuendumu communities and First Nations peoples across the country. 

We express our deep sorrow over his death and for the racism, violence and systematic over-incarceration of First Nations people that has led to 597 Aboriginal deaths in custody since the Royal Commission. 

Leader of the Australian Greens and First Nations spokesperson, Larissa Waters:

“The Greens share in the sorrow and outrage felt at yet another First Nations death in custody, the tenth already in 2025.

“How did a hungry young man on disability support end up as yet another death in custody, and how is the nation supposed to accept police investigating themselves over this?  

“The Greens condemn the Northern Territory Police’s refusal to support an independent inquiry into Kumanjayi White’s death.

“We have long called for independent, transparent investigations into Aboriginal deaths in custody, led by culturally safe processes and free from police or state interference.

“There must be the immediate establishment of a fully independent inquiry into the circumstances of Kumanjayi White’s death, with full powers to compel evidence and witness testimony.

“We must properly resource community focused solutions led by First Nations people.

“The Greens remain committed to our work alongside families, communities and grassroots organisations to end Aboriginal deaths in custody and uphold the rights and dignity of First Nations people.”

Greens Justice spokesperson, David Shoebridge: 

“My thoughts are with the Warlpiri and Yuendumu communities and First Nations peoples across the country as they grieve another Black death in custody. 

“The family of Kumanjayi White have called for an independent investigation into his death and an independent commission into structural racism, including police conduct and the Greens support these calls.

“We implore governments at all levels to listen to community on how to stop Aboriginal deaths in custody, and then act. 

Kat McNamara MLA, Member for Nightcliff

“We are at a crisis point in the Northern Territory with regular news about racism within the Police and ongoing attacks upon the rights of Aboriginal people and communities. 

“Every day on average 24 First Nations people are taken into custody in the NT, a significant over representation.

“Aboriginal controlled initiatives need to be resourced properly to lead us toward real reform and justice.

Appeal to locate teen missing from Warabrook

Police are appealing for public assistance to locate a teenager missing from the Newcastle area.

Callum Schonewille, aged 15, was last seen in Warabrook about 8am on Monday 2 June 2025.

When he could not be located or contacted, officers attached to Newcastle City Police District were notified on Tuesday 3 June 2025 and commenced inquiries into his whereabouts.

Police and family hold concerns for his welfare.

Callum is described as being of Caucasian appearance, about 160cm tall with slim build and short light brown hair.

He was last seen wearing a grey hooded jumper, black track pants, purple Asics runners, and carrying a satchel bag.

He is known to frequent Hamilton South, Windale, Belmont North and Charlestown.

Greens launch big corporation tax to protect essential services in the upcoming Budget

Today Leader of the ACT Greens Shane Rattenbury, alongside Deputy Leader of the ACT Greens, Jo Clay have launched a measured yet ambitious big corporations tax to safeguard essential services from being cut in this upcoming Budget.

Leader of the ACT Greens, Shane Rattenbury said the announcement will provide a pathway for the ACT Government to ensure the next budget does not cut essential services just to balance the books.

“In the last few months, we have seen the Labor Government rake up a $387 million overspend on the health budget and indicate they will need to make tough decisions to manage future spending.

“In the context of a budget that is pushing at the sides, and a national crisis in essential services like housing, healthcare and transport–we need a plan to fund the things Canberrans really need, right here, right now.”

The Greens plan announced today would introduce a new taxation threshold, for corporations with an Australia wide payroll of over $200 million a year, like Coles, Woolworths and the big banks – raising $107 million every year.

“Companies that operate in our city and make billions in profits, like Qantas and Wesfarmers, should be paying their fair share of tax. But instead, they’re raking in massive profits while Canberrans struggle with the cost of living,” Mr Rattenbury said.

“In just the first half of 2025, Woolworths pocketed a $1.7 billion profit—while a record number of Canberrans are turning to food banks because they can’t afford to eat. The contrast couldn’t be starker.”

Deputy Leader of the ACT Greens and Spokesperson for Finance, Jo Clay said the move will save services from being cut and help the government to fund more things Canberrans really need, like health and housing.

“Too many people are facing homelessness, sacrificing meals to feed their kids, or skipping medical appointments. We can’t afford service cuts when people in Canberra are already struggling,” Ms Clay said.

“Taking services away from our community is not good economic management – it increases disadvantage and pushes more people into crisis.

“We just saw the government need more money for the hospital because people cannot get affordable care before they reach an emergency. Balancing the books won’t work if you’re hurting the people you’re supposed to represent and kicking costs down the road.

“If the ACT Labor Government truly believe they are progressive and practical, then they will tax the corporations making billions in profits off everyday people in Canberra and redirect that into the services people need and want.”

Today’s announcement pushes upcoming changes to the ACT’s payroll tax to be more ambitious, fair and ensure the services people in Canberra want and need are actually funded.

The policy will not impact small or medium sized businesses. It will ensure the largest and most profitable corporations in the ACT are paying their fair share in tax.

Major General or NACC Commissioner? Commissioner Brereton needs to choose

The National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) Commissioner, Paul Brereton, attended at least 18 formal Defence functions in his uniform as a Major General since his appointment as NACC Commissioner in July 2023, according to budget estimates responses provided to Greens Senator Shoebridge today. 

Defence’s $55 billion budget, and the repeated procurement scandals inside the organisation, mean it is a prime target for the federal anti-corruption watchdog.

The answers to questions on notice detail how NACC Commissioner Paul Brereton maintains extensive ongoing military commitments, including an honorary Major General rank and Colonel Commandant role, raising serious questions about potential conflicts of interest. 

The responses show not only has Commissioner Brereton attended multiple military functions in uniform, accessed defence facilities, but he also successfully petitioned the Chief of Army to allow him to retain his Major General rank and entitlements despite hitting the statutory age limit. This was all at the same time as he has been tasked with independently investigating Defence in his role as NACC Commissioner.

Senator David Shoebridge, Greens Spokesperson for Defence and Justice, said:

‘What these answers make clear is that every time Commissioner Brereton puts on his Major General uniform he is actively putting himself into the Defence hierarchy and subject to the lawful direction from Defence leadership.

“As recently as June last year Commissioner Brereton personally asked the Chief of Army for a favour, to keep his uniform and his position as a Major General, and we would never have found this out if we didn’t force these answers out of him.

“It’s such an obvious conflict of interest when the head of the NACC is seeking favours from Defence leadership at the same time that he is meant to be fearlessly investigating serious corruption inside Defence.

“These answers show Commissioner Brereton repeatedly going to swanky dinners and formal functions with Defence, in fact he has attended an ADF event nearly every month since heading up the NACC.

“Commissioner Brereton’s position is increasingly untenable. The NACC needs to be beyond reproach and have the full trust of the public. 

“Playing military dressup and seeking favours from Defence, while being tasked with investigating them, breaks trust with the public and shows a serious lack of judgement.”