Electricity Corporations Act 2005

Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Regulations 2013

 

Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Regulations 2013

Contents

Part 1 — Preliminary

1.Citation1

2.Commencement1

3.Terms used1

4.New contestable customer arrangement5

Part 2 — Segregation

Division 1 — Segmentation of EGRC operations

5.Division of EGRC operations into segments6

Division 3 — Other segregation obligations

13.Disclosure of retail restricted information7

14.Information technology access controls7

15.Training7

16.Separate work areas8

17.Separation of management roles8

Division 4 — Segregation arrangements

18.Minister may approve arrangements9

19.Commencement of segregation arrangements9

20.Amendment or repeal of segregation arrangements10

Part 3 — Wholesale acquisition or supply of electricity

Division 1 — Wholesaling obligations

22.EGRC not to discriminate between retail business unit and competitors when offering wholesale supply11

23.Policy for determining terms and conditions for wholesale supply of electricity11

24.Requests for wholesale supply of electricity12

25.Records13

Division 2 — Wholesale arrangements

26.Minister may approve arrangements13

27.Commencement of wholesale arrangements14

28.Amendment or repeal of wholesale arrangements14

Part 4 — Audit

29.Audit by Authority: compliance with Pt. 3 Div. 1 and wholesale arrangements15

30.Audit by Auditor General: compliance with Pt. 2 Div. 1 and 3 and segregation arrangements15

Part 5 — Enforcement

Division 1 — Investigation

33.Authority has investigative role17

Division 2 — Imposition of civil penalties

34.Civil penalty provisions and penalty amounts17

35.Daily amounts17

36.Requirement for investigation18

37.Warning notice18

38.Authority may impose civil penalty18

39.Board may order payment19

40.Enforcement of order of Board20

41.Civil penalties to be credited to Consolidated Account20

Division 3 — Review of civil penalty decisions

42.Review by Board21

43.Application for review21

44.Procedure on review22

Division 4 — Proceedings

45.Proceedings before Board22

Part 6 — Miscellaneous

46.Retention of records and documents23

47.Exemption23

48.Review of EGRC regulatory scheme24

49.Deletion of commercially sensitive matters from Authority’s report24

Schedule 1 — Civil penalty provisions

Notes

Compilation table26

Defined terms

 

Electricity Corporations Act 2005

Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Regulations 2013

Part 1  Preliminary

1.Citation

These regulations are the Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Regulations 2013.

2.Commencement

These regulations come into operation as follows —

(a)Part 1 — on the day on which these regulations are published in the Gazette;

(b)the rest of the regulations — on the day on which the Electricity Corporations Amendment Act 2013 section 6 comes into operation.

3.Terms used

In these regulations, unless the contrary intention appears —

audit has the meaning given in the Auditor General Act 2006 section 4(1);

Authority means the Economic Regulation Authority;

Board means the Western Australian Electricity Review Board established by the Energy Arbitration and Review Act 1998 section 50(1);

civil penalty decision means a decision of the Authority under regulation 38(1) to impose a civil penalty;

civil penalty provision means a provision specified in Schedule 1;

contestable customer means a customer other than a customer of a class prescribed under section 54(4) of the Act for the purposes of section 54(2) of the Act;

customer has the meaning given in the Electricity Industry Act 2004 section 3;

EGRC means the Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation;

EGRC business unit means —

(a)the generation business unit; or

(b)the wholesale business unit; or

(c)the retail business unit; or

(d)the part of the EGRC that conducts the operations constituting any additional segment approved under regulation 5(2);

EGRC regulatory scheme means the following —

(a)these regulations;

(b)segregation arrangements;

(c)wholesale arrangements;

generation business has the meaning given in regulation 5(1)(a);

generation business unit means the part of the EGRC that conducts the generation business;

generation competitor means a person, other than the EGRC, who is, or is likely to be, required to hold a generation licence (as defined in the Electricity Industry Act 2004 section 3) or is exempt under section 8 of that Act from the requirement to hold such a licence;

generation operations means operations involving the construction or operation of generating works (as defined in the Electricity Industry Act 2004 section 3);

new contestable customer arrangement has the meaning given in regulation 4;

retail business has the meaning given in regulation 5(1)(c);

retail business unit means the part of the EGRC that conducts the retail business;

retail competitor means a person, other than the EGRC, who is, or is likely to be, required to hold a retail licence (as defined in the Electricity Industry Act 2004 section 3) or is exempt under section 8 of that Act from the requirement to hold such a licence;

retail operations means operations involving the pricing, sale and marketing of electricity to customers served by the South West interconnected system;

retail restricted information means information relating to a retail competitor that —

(a)is obtained by or provided to wholesale staff in the course of the conduct of the wholesale business; and

(b)might reasonably be expected to materially adversely affect the commercial interests of the retail competitor if disclosed to retail staff;

retail staff means staff, other than shared services staff, who are involved in the conduct of the retail business;

segregation arrangements means arrangements approved under regulation 18(1) as in force from time to time;

shared services operations means —

(a)operations relating to the following —

(i)corporate planning and strategy;

(ii)organisational development;

(iii)accounting, financial and legal matters;

(iv)human resources;

(v)information technology support;

(vi)regulatory and compliance matters;

(vii)communications;

(viii)billing;

(ix)record keeping;

and

(b)any other operations (excluding generation operations, wholesale operations and retail operations) undertaken in connection with 2 or more EGRC business units;

shared services staff means staff involved in the conduct of shared services operations;

staff means members of staff of the EGRC, agents of the EGRC or persons engaged by the EGRC under contracts for services;

wholesale arrangements means arrangements approved under regulation 26(1) as in force from time to time;

wholesale business has the meaning given in regulation 5(1)(b);

wholesale business unit means the part of the EGRC that conducts the wholesale business;

wholesale operations means —

(a)operations involving the wholesale acquisition or supply of electricity (including pricing in respect of such acquisition or supply); or

(b)operations involving the acquisition or supply of wholesale products (including pricing in respect of such acquisition or supply);

wholesale products has the meaning given in section 38(1)(b) of the Act;

wholesale staff means staff, other than shared services staff, who are involved in the conduct of the wholesale business.

[Regulation 3 amended: SL 2023/98 r. 4; SL 2024/160 r. 4.]

4.New contestable customer arrangement

(1)For the purposes of these regulations, a new contestable customer arrangement is an arrangement between the EGRC and a contestable customer that —

(a)imposes a legal obligation on the EGRC to supply electricity to the contestable customer on a retail basis; and

(b)becomes legally binding on the EGRC after 31 December 2013.

(2)Despite subregulation (1), an arrangement is not a new contestable customer arrangement if —

(a)the arrangement becomes legally binding on the EGRC after 31 December 2013 as a result of the contestable customer accepting, on or before 31 March 2014 and without amendment, an offer for the retail supply of electricity that was made by the EGRC to the contestable customer before 1 January 2014; or

(b)the arrangement is for the supply of electricity to the contestable customer at a charge determined in accordance with the Energy Operators (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) (Charges) By‑laws 2006.

(3)If an arrangement for the retail supply of electricity is legally binding on the EGRC on 1 January 2014, but is varied by agreement after 31 December 2013, subregulation (1)(b) applies as if the arrangement became legally binding on the EGRC when the variation took effect.

[Regulation 4 amended: SL 2024/160 r. 5.]

Part 2 — Segregation

Division 1 — Segmentation of EGRC operations

5.Division of EGRC operations into segments

(1)The EGRC must divide its operations into the following segments —

(a)a segment (the generation business) comprising —

(i)generation operations; and

(ii)other operations as determined by the EGRC from time to time;

(b)a segment (the wholesale business) comprising —

(i)wholesale operations; and

(ii)other operations as determined by the EGRC from time to time;

(c)a segment (the retail business) comprising —

(i)retail operations; and

(ii)other operations as determined by the EGRC from time to time;

(d)a segment comprising shared services operations;

(e)any additional segment or segments approved under subregulation (2).

(2)The Minister may, by instrument published in the Gazette, approve one or more segments in addition to the segments referred to in subregulation (1)(a) to (d).

(3)The Minister must cause a copy of an instrument under subregulation (2) to be laid before each House of Parliament within 10 sitting days of that House after the day on which the instrument is published in the Gazette.

(4)The EGRC must keep a record of the details of the segments required under subregulation (1) and of any changes to those segments.

[Regulation 5 amended: SL 2023/98 r. 5.]

[Division 2 deleted: SL 2024/160 r. 6.]

Division 3 — Other segregation obligations

13.Disclosure of retail restricted information

(1)The EGRC must ensure that retail restricted information is not disclosed to retail staff.

(2)The EGRC is not required to comply with subregulation (1) if —

(a)the retail restricted information is publicly available at the time the disclosure is made; or

(b)the disclosure of the retail restricted information is required by law.

[Regulation 13 amended: SL 2024/160 r. 7.]

14.Information technology access controls

The EGRC must develop, implement and maintain controls to limit access to its information technology systems for the purpose of ensuring compliance with regulation 13(1).

15.Training

(1)The EGRC must develop, implement and maintain appropriate policies, procedures and systems for the purpose of ensuring that staff who receive or have access to retail restricted information are made aware of the obligations imposed on the EGRC under this Division and complete training in relation to those obligations.

(2)The EGRC must ensure that training referred to in subregulation (1) is conducted at least once each year.

(3)The EGRC must keep a record of staff who have completed training referred to in subregulation (1).

[Regulation 15 amended: SL 2024/160 r. 8.]

16.Separate work areas

(1)The EGRC must ensure that wholesale staff who have access to retail restricted information occupy work areas that are separate from work areas occupied by retail staff.

(2)For the purposes of subregulation (1), work areas are separate from work areas occupied by retail staff if the work areas are protected by controls that prevent retail staff from entering them.

[Regulation 16 amended: SL 2024/160 r. 9.]

17.Separation of management roles

(1)This regulation does not apply to shared services staff.

(2)The EGRC must ensure that —

(a)a member of staff who has management responsibility for the generation business does not have management responsibility for the wholesale business or the retail business; and

(b)a member of staff who has management responsibility for the wholesale business does not have management responsibility for the generation business or the retail business; and

(c)a member of staff who has management responsibility for the retail business does not have management responsibility for the generation business or the wholesale business.

(3)For the purposes of subregulation (2), a member of staff has management responsibility for the generation business, wholesale business or retail business if the member of staff has authority to make decisions about the day‑to‑day management and operation of the business.

[Regulation 17 amended: SL 2024/160 r. 10.]

Division 4 — Segregation arrangements

18.Minister may approve arrangements

(1)The Minister may approve arrangements providing for and in relation to the segregation of the wholesale business, the generation business, the retail business and any additional segment approved under regulation 5(2).

(2)Before approving arrangements under subregulation (1), the Minister must consult with the EGRC.

(3)Segregation arrangements must be published in the Gazette.

(4)The Minister must cause a copy of segregation arrangements to be laid before each House of Parliament within 10 sitting days of that House after the day on which the arrangements are published in the Gazette.

19.Commencement of segregation arrangements

(1)In this regulation —

segregation arrangements includes an instrument made under regulation 20.

(2)Segregation arrangements commence at a time fixed —

(a)by the segregation arrangements; or

(b)in a manner provided for by the segregation arrangements.

(3)Different commencement times may be fixed under subregulation (2)(a) for different provisions of segregation arrangements.

(4)Different commencement times may be fixed under subregulation (2)(b) for different provisions of segregation arrangements unless those segregation arrangements provide otherwise.

20.Amendment or repeal of segregation arrangements

(1)The Minister may, by instrument published in the Gazette, amend or repeal segregation arrangements.

(2)The Minister must cause a copy of an instrument under subregulation (1) to be laid before each House of Parliament within 10 sitting days of that House after the day on which the instrument is published in the Gazette.

Part 3 — Wholesale acquisition or supply of electricity

Division 1 — Wholesaling obligations

[21.Deleted: SL 2024/160 r. 11.]

22.EGRC not to discriminate between retail business unit and competitors when offering wholesale supply

The EGRC must ensure that the financial interests of the retail business unit are not taken into account in determining the terms and conditions on which a wholesale supply of electricity is offered to retail competitors or generation competitors.

[Regulation 22 inserted: SL 2024/160 r. 12.]

23.Policy for determining terms and conditions for wholesale supply of electricity

(1)The EGRC must prepare and maintain a written policy setting out standard processes to be followed in offering a wholesale supply of electricity to the retail business unit, a retail competitor or a generation competitor, including processes for —

(a)assessing the ability of the retail business unit, retail competitor or generation competitor to make payments for the wholesale supply of electricity; and

(b)determining the terms and conditions on which the wholesale supply of electricity is to be offered, taking into account that assessed ability.

(2)The EGRC must ensure that the standard processes set out in the policy are not, having regard to all relevant circumstances, more favourable to the retail business unit than to a retail competitor or a generation competitor.

(3)The EGRC must comply with the policy.

(4)For the purposes of assessing the ability of the retail business unit to make payments for the wholesale supply of electricity, the financial position of the retail business unit is to be taken to be the financial position of the EGRC.

(5)The EGRC must —

(a)give a copy of the policy, and any revision of the policy, to the Minister; and

(b)ensure that a copy of the policy, as revised from time to time, is published on its website.

(6)The EGRC may remove from the copy of the policy published under subregulation (5)(b) any information it considers is of a commercially sensitive nature.

24.Requests for wholesale supply of electricity

(1)The EGRC must, as soon as practicable after receiving a request for a wholesale supply of electricity to the retail business unit, a retail competitor or a generation competitor, respond in writing to the request.

(2)The EGRC must prepare and maintain a written policy setting out standard processes to be followed in responding to requests for a wholesale supply of electricity to the retail business unit, a retail competitor or a generation competitor.

(3)The EGRC must ensure that the standard processes set out in the policy are not, having regard to all relevant circumstances, more favourable to the retail business unit than to a retail competitor or a generation competitor.

(4)The EGRC must comply with the policy.

(5)The EGRC must —

(a)give a copy of the policy, and any revision of the policy, to the Minister; and

(b)ensure that a copy of the policy, as revised from time to time, is published on its website.

(6)The EGRC may remove from the copy of the policy published under subregulation (5)(b) any information it considers is of a commercially sensitive nature.

25.Records

The EGRC must keep records of the following —

(a)each assessment of the ability of the retail business unit, a retail competitor or a generation competitor to make payments that is carried out under the policy referred to in regulation 23(1);

(b)each request by the retail business unit, a retail competitor or a generation competitor for a wholesale supply of electricity, the response given to the request, and the documents or other material relied upon in giving the response;

(c)the EGRC’s ability to offer a wholesale supply of electricity at the time each request referred to in paragraph (b) is made, taking into account any contracts, agreements or other arrangements entered into by the EGRC in relation to such supply.

Division 2 — Wholesale arrangements

26.Minister may approve arrangements

(1)The Minister may approve arrangements providing for and in relation to —

(a)the wholesale acquisition or supply of electricity by the EGRC; and

(b)the acquisition or supply by the EGRC of wholesale products.

(2)Wholesale arrangements must be published in the Gazette.

(3)The Minister must cause a copy of wholesale arrangements to be laid before each House of Parliament within 10 sitting days of that House after the day on which the arrangements are published in the Gazette.

27.Commencement of wholesale arrangements

(1)In this regulation —

wholesale arrangements includes an instrument made under regulation 28.

(2)Wholesale arrangements commence at a time fixed —

(a)by the wholesale arrangements; or

(b)in a manner provided for by the wholesale arrangements.

(3)Different commencement times may be fixed under subregulation (2)(a) for different provisions of wholesale arrangements.

(4)Different commencement times may be fixed under subregulation (2)(b) for different provisions of wholesale arrangements unless those wholesale arrangements provide otherwise.

28.Amendment or repeal of wholesale arrangements

(1)The Minister may, by instrument published in the Gazette, amend or repeal wholesale arrangements.

(2)The Minister must cause a copy of an instrument under subregulation (1) to be laid before each House of Parliament within 10 sitting days of that House after the day on which the instrument is published in the Gazette.

Part 4  Audit

29.Audit by Authority: compliance with Pt. 3 Div. 1 and wholesale arrangements

(1)As soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, the Authority must conduct an audit of the EGRC’s operations in the financial year for the purposes of examining the EGRC’s compliance with Part 3 Division 1 and wholesale arrangements.

(2)Despite subregulation (1), the Authority may extend the period in relation to which an audit is conducted.

(3)The Authority must form an opinion about whether the EGRC has complied with Part 3 Division 1 and wholesale arrangements.

(4)The Authority must give the Minister a report on each audit conducted under this regulation, including the following information —

(a)the opinion formed by the Authority under subregulation (3);

(b)details of the EGRC’s failure, if any, to comply with Part 3 Division 1 and wholesale arrangements.

(5)The Authority must give a copy of the report to the board of the EGRC as soon as practicable after the report is given to the Minister.

(6)The Minister must cause a copy of the report to be laid before each House of Parliament within 21 sitting days of that House after the day on which the report is given to the Minister.

[Regulation 29 inserted: SL 2024/160 r. 13.]

30.Audit by Auditor General: compliance with Pt. 2 Div. 1 and 3 and segregation arrangements

(1)As soon as practicable after 31 December each year, the Auditor General must conduct an audit of the EGRC’s operations in the year for the purposes of examining the EGRC’s compliance with the following —

(a)Part 2 Division 1 and segregation arrangements;

(b)Part 2 Division 3.

(2)For the purposes of the first audit conducted under subregulation (1)(a), the period beginning on 1 July 2023 and ending on 31 December 2024 is taken to be a year.

(3)The Auditor General must form an opinion about whether the EGRC has complied with the following —

(a)Part 2 Division 1 and segregation arrangements;

(b)Part 2 Division 3.

(4)The Auditor General must give the Minister a report on each audit conducted under this regulation, including the following information —

(a)the opinion formed by the Auditor General under subregulation (3);

(b)details of the EGRC’s failure, if any, to comply with Part 2 Division 1 or 3 or segregation arrangements.

(5)The Auditor General must —

(a)give a copy of the report to the board of the EGRC and to the Authority as soon as practicable after the report is given to the Minister; and

(b)cause a copy of the report to be laid before each House of Parliament within 21 sitting days of that House after the day on which the report is given to the Minister.

[Regulation 30 inserted: SL 2024/160 r. 13.]

[31.Deleted: SL 2024/160 r. 13.]

[32.Deleted: Gazette 3 Jun 2014 p. 1742.]

Part 5 — Enforcement

Division 1 — Investigation

33.Authority has investigative role

If the Auditor General or the Authority has formed an opinion, as detailed in a report under Part 4, that the EGRC has not complied with one or more provisions of the EGRC regulatory scheme, it is a function of the Authority to investigate the matter.

[Regulation 33 amended: SL 2024/160 r. 14.]

Division 2 — Imposition of civil penalties

34.Civil penalty provisions and penalty amounts

(1)The provisions of the regulations specified in Schedule 1 are civil penalty provisions for the purposes of these regulations.

(2)The maximum amount that the Authority may impose on the EGRC for a contravention of a civil penalty provision is —

(a)an amount of $100 000; and

(b)in addition, a daily amount of $20 000.

35.Daily amounts

(1)A daily amount is an amount for each day or part of a day that a contravention of a civil penalty provision continues after the day, specified in a warning notice given to the EGRC under regulation 37, by which the contravention was to be rectified.

(2)For the purposes of subregulation (1), if the contravention consists of a failure to do something required to be done, the contravention is to be regarded as continuing until the act is done, despite the fact that any period within which, or time before which, the act is required to be done has expired or passed.

36.Requirement for investigation

The Authority cannot give the EGRC a warning notice under regulation 37 or a notice under regulation 38 unless the Authority has conducted an investigation under regulation 33 in respect of the matter to which the notice relates.

37.Warning notice

(1)If the Authority considers that the EGRC has contravened a civil penalty provision, the Authority may give the EGRC a notice (a warning notice).

(2)The warning notice must —

(a)identify the civil penalty provision that the Authority considers the EGRC has contravened; and

(b)provide details of the contravention, including the act or omission that the Authority considers constitutes the contravention; and

(c)request an explanation; and

(d)request that the contravention be rectified and specify a day by which it must be rectified.

38.Authority may impose civil penalty

(1)If the Authority considers that the EGRC has contravened a civil penalty provision, the Authority may, by notice in accordance with subregulation (2), impose on the EGRC a civil penalty of an amount that does not exceed the maximum amount prescribed in regulation 34(2).

(2)The notice must —

(a)be in writing given to the EGRC; and

(b)state that it is given under this regulation; and

(c)specify the civil penalty provision that the Authority considers the EGRC has contravened; and

(d)provide details of the contravention, including the act or omission that the Authority considers constitutes the contravention; and

(e)specify the amount of the civil penalty; and

(f)inform the EGRC that the EGRC may apply to the Board for review of the Authority’s decision to impose the civil penalty; and

(g)contain a statement to the effect that the Authority may apply to the Board for an order for the payment of the civil penalty if the EGRC does not, within 28 days after the day on which the notice is given —

(i)pay to the Authority the amount imposed; or

(ii)apply to the Board, under regulation 42, for review of the Authority’s decision to impose the civil penalty.

(3)Except in the case of a civil penalty that includes a daily amount, the Authority may impose a civil penalty under subregulation (1) without first giving the EGRC a warning notice under regulation 37 in respect of the contravention to which the civil penalty relates.

(4)The imposition of a civil penalty under subregulation (1) must occur within 6 years after the day on which the EGRC is considered by the Authority to have contravened the relevant civil penalty provision.

(5)In determining the amount of a civil penalty, the Authority must have regard to all relevant matters, including the following —

(a)the nature and extent of the contravention;

(b)the circumstances in which the contravention took place.

39.Board may order payment

(1)The Authority may apply to the Board for an order for the payment of a civil penalty specified in a notice given to the EGRC under regulation 38 if the EGRC does not, within 28 days after the day on which the notice is given —

(a)pay to the Authority the amount imposed; or

(b)apply to the Board, under regulation 42, for review of the Authority’s decision to impose the civil penalty.

(2)An application under subregulation (1) must be made within 28 days after the end of the 28 day period referred to in that subregulation.

(3)The Board may, on an application under subregulation (1), make an order that the EGRC pay the civil penalty imposed if —

(a)the Authority imposed the civil penalty in accordance with regulation 38; and

(b)the EGRC has not paid the civil penalty to the Authority; and

(c)the EGRC has not applied to the Board, under regulation 42, for review of the Authority’s decision to impose the civil penalty.

40.Enforcement of order of Board

(1)The Authority may enforce an order of the Board made under regulation 39(3) by lodging with the Supreme Court a certified copy of it and an affidavit stating to what extent it has not been complied with.

(2)When lodged, the order is to be taken to be a judgment of the Supreme Court and may be enforced accordingly.

41.Civil penalties to be credited to Consolidated Account

A civil penalty paid to the Authority must be credited to the Consolidated Account.

Division 3 — Review of civil penalty decisions

42.Review by Board

(1)The EGRC may apply to the Board for the review of a civil penalty decision.

(2)In proceedings on an application for review, the Board may make an order affirming, setting aside or varying (immediately or as from a specified future date) the civil penalty decision and, for the purposes of the review, may exercise the same powers as were available to the Authority when making the civil penalty decision.

(3)The Board may refuse to review a civil penalty decision if it considers that the application for review is trivial or vexatious.

(4)The determination by the Board on the review of a civil penalty decision has the same effect as if it were made by the Authority.

43.Application for review

(1)An application for review of a civil penalty decision must be made within 28 days after the day on which the notice relating to the decision is given to the EGRC under regulation 38.

(2)An application for review must —

(a)be in writing; and

(b)provide details of the civil penalty decision.

(3)The Board may extend the time within which an application for review may be made and may do so even though the time has elapsed.

(4)The Board must give written notice of an application for review to the Authority.

44.Procedure on review

(1)This regulation applies to proceedings on an application for review.

(2)The Board must make its determination on the review within 90 days after receiving the application for review.

(3)The Board may extend, or further extend, the period referred to in subregulation (2) by a period of 30 days if it considers that the matter cannot be dealt with properly without the extension, either because of its complexity or because of other special circumstances.

(4)If the Board extends the period, it must, before the end of the period, notify the EGRC of the extension and the reasons for it.

(5)The Board may require the Authority to give information and other assistance, and to make reports, as specified by the Board for the purposes of the proceedings.

Division 4 — Proceedings

45.Proceedings before Board

(1)In this regulation —

proceedings means —

(a)proceedings on an application for an order under regulation 39; or

(b)proceedings on an application for review of a civil penalty decision under regulation 42.

(2)On the application of the Authority or the EGRC, the Board may conduct proceedings in the absence of the public.

(3)The Board may make such orders (if any) as to costs in respect of proceedings as it thinks fit.

Part 6  Miscellaneous

46.Retention of records and documents

The EGRC must ensure that each record or document created for the purposes of these regulations is retained for at least 7 years after its creation.

47.Exemption

(1)The Minister may, by instrument given to the EGRC, exempt the EGRC from the operation of a provision of the EGRC regulatory scheme.

(2)An application for an exemption must —

(a)be in writing; and

(b)set out the reasons for the application; and

(c)set out the exemption sought.

(3)The Minister may give an exemption —

(a)on different terms from those sought by the EGRC; and

(b)subject to any conditions the Minister considers appropriate and specifies in the exemption.

(4)The Minister may, by instrument given to the EGRC, amend or revoke an exemption.

(5)If the Minister gives the EGRC an instrument under this regulation, the Minister must cause a copy of it to be laid before each House of Parliament within 14 sitting days of that House after the day on which it is given.

48.Review of EGRC regulatory scheme

(1)By 31 December 2021 and after that, at least once in every 2 years, the Authority must —

(a)carry out a review of the operation of the EGRC regulatory scheme for the purpose of assessing its effectiveness; and

(b)give the Minister a report based on its review.

(2)In carrying out the review the Authority must have regard to —

(a)the prevailing circumstances that exist in relation to the operation of the South West interconnected system; and

(b)any other matters the Authority considers relevant.

[(3)deleted]

(4)The Authority may include in the report any recommendations it has concerning amendment of the EGRC regulatory scheme.

(5)The Minister must cause a copy of the report to be laid before each House of Parliament within 21 sitting days of that House after the day on which the Minister receives the report.

[Regulation 48 amended: Gazette 13 Dec 2019 p. 4230.]

49.Deletion of commercially sensitive matters from Authority’s report

(1)The Authority may request the Minister to delete a matter that is of a commercially sensitive nature from a copy of a report that is to be laid before a House of Parliament under regulation 48(5).

(2)The Minister may, despite regulation 48(5), comply with a request under subregulation (1).

(3)If the Minister complies with a request under subregulation (1) the copy of the report is to include a statement that a matter has been deleted from it under this regulation.

 

Schedule 1  Civil penalty provisions

[r. 34(1)]

r. 5(1) and (4)

r. 11(1), (3) and (5)

r. 12(1) and (5)

r. 13(1)

r. 16(1)

r. 22

 

Notes

This is a compilation of the Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Regulations 2013 and includes amendments made by other written laws. For provisions that have come into operation see the compilation table.

Compilation table

Citation

Published

Commencement

Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Regulations 2013

27 Dec 2013 p. 6487‑523

r. 1 and 2: 27 Dec 2013 (see r. 2(a));
Regulations other than r. 1 and 2: 1 Jan 2014 (see. r. 2(b) and
Gazette 27 Dec  2013 p. 6465)

Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Amendment Regulations 2014

3 Jun 2014 p. 1742

r. 1 and 2: 3 Jun 2014 (see r. 2(a));
Regulations other than r. 1 and 2: 4 Jun 2014 (see r. 2(b))

Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Amendment Regulations 2019

13 Dec 2019 p. 4229‑30

r. 1 and 2: 13 Dec 2019 (see r. 2(a));
Regulations other than r. 1 and 2: 14 Dec 2019 (see r. 2(b))

Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Amendment Regulations 2023

SL 2023/98 30 Jun 2023

r. 1 and 2: 30 Jun 2023 (see r. 2(a));
Regulations other than r. 1 and 2: 1 Jul 2023 (see r. 2(b))

Government Trading Enterprises Regulations 2023 Pt. 4 Div. 1

SL 2023/100 30 Jun 2023

1 Jul 2023 (see r. 2)

Electricity Corporations (Electricity Generation and Retail Corporation) Amendment Regulations 2024

SL 2024/160 7 Aug 2024

r. 1 and 2: 7 Aug 2024 (see r. 2(a));
Regulations other than r. 1 and 2: 8 Aug 2024 (see r. 2(b))

 

Defined terms

 

[This is a list of terms defined and the provisions where they are defined. The list is not part of the law.]

Defined termProvision(s)

audit3

Authority3

Board3

civil penalty decision3

civil penalty provision3

contestable customer3

customer3

EGRC3

EGRC business unit3

EGRC regulatory scheme3

generation business3, 5(1)

generation business unit3

generation competitor3

generation operations3

new contestable customer arrangement3, 4(1)

proceedings45(1)

retail business3, 5(1)

retail business unit3

retail competitor3

retail operations3

retail restricted information3

retail staff3

segregation arrangements3, 19(1)

shared services operations3

shared services staff3

staff3

warning notice37(1)

wholesale arrangements3, 27(1)

wholesale business3, 5(1)

wholesale business unit3

wholesale operations3

wholesale products3

wholesale staff3

 

 

© State of Western Australia 2024.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY 4.0). To view relevant information and for a link to a copy of the licence, visit www.legislation.wa.gov.au.

Attribute work as: © State of Western Australia 2024.

By Authority: GEOFF O. LAWN, Government Printer