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Emergency Energy & Economic Security Plan 2026

Released 31 March 2026

Australia is an island nation at the edge of the world. The very thing that brings the world closer to us also threatens to isolate us: energy. It’s time Australia takes its destiny into its own hands. There is no reason why Australia should not be a self-sufficient, energy-exporting powerhouse. We must do everything we can to secure our future and put our national interests first.
 
Protecting Australian Workers, Small Businesses, and Re-Establishing Energy Sovereignty
 
The Australian Lobby Group calls for urgent legislative action to shield Australian workers and small-to-medium enterprises from excessive taxation and regulatory burdens, while restoring fiscal responsibility and energy security. Persistent cost-of-living pressures, bracket creep, and misallocated public spending have eroded household incomes and business viability. The following seven measures provide targeted, evidence-based relief and reorient national policy toward productive domestic priorities. 
 
1. Statutory Protections for Established SMEs from ATO Enforcement
 
Businesses operating for two years or more that employ Australian residents shall receive immediate legislative safeguards. These include a moratorium on aggressive debt recovery actions, streamlined compliance requirements, automatic penalty relief for good-faith operators, and the establishment of an independent SME Ombudsman with enforceable powers. Such protections prevent disproportionate regulatory impacts on job-creating enterprises and support employment stability. 

Forecast real-world outcomes include a measurable reduction in SME closures and insolvencies, preservation of at least 200,000 existing jobs within the first 24 months, increased business investment and hiring, and a shift in ATO focus to high-risk large entities rather than compliant family operations.Established SMEs form the backbone of private-sector employment and regional economies. Shielding them from discretionary enforcement lowers compliance costs, reduces uncertainty, and allows capital to remain deployed in productive activity instead of being diverted to legal defence or premature liquidation. 
 
2. Temporary Option to Divert Superannuation Contributions to Take-Home Pay
 
All working Australians shall be permitted to redirect their concessional superannuation contributions directly to take-home pay for an initial twelve-month period, subject to review and potential extension. This measure enhances immediate disposable income without long-term erosion of retirement savings, allowing individuals greater flexibility during sustained inflationary conditions.

Forecast real-world outcomes include an average increase in household disposable income of $3,000 to $5,000 per annum for participating workers, higher consumer spending and retail activity, reduced reliance on short-term credit, and maintained super balances through voluntary future catch-up contributions once conditions stabilise.

Concessional contributions are taxed at a flat 15 percent. Diverting them at the same rate delivers immediate liquidity to households facing real wage stagnation, stimulates aggregate demand without adding to public debt, and respects individual agency over compulsory savings during an acute cost-of-living shock. 
 
3. Temporary Increase in the Tax-Free Threshold to $50,000
 
The personal income tax-free threshold shall be raised immediately to $50,000 for all Australian residents, with the adjustment maintained for a minimum of twenty-four months. This change directly alleviates bracket creep, reduces effective tax rates on lower and middle incomes, and delivers broad-based relief to households facing elevated living costs.

Forecast real-world outcomes include lifting more than 1.2 million Australians out of the tax system entirely, an effective tax cut equivalent to $2,000 to $4,000 annually for median earners, increased labour-force participation, especially among second earners and part-time workers, and a measurable boost to aggregate consumption without inflationary wage-price spirals.

The current $18,200 threshold has been eroded by inflation and bracket creep. Raising it to $50,000 restores progressivity at the bottom of the scale, improves work incentives by lowering marginal effective tax rates, and injects stimulus directly into household budgets rather than through inefficient government spending programs. 
 
4. Suspension of All Green Energy Subsidies and Grants
 
All existing subsidies, grants, and taxpayer-funded support mechanisms for renewable energy projects shall be suspended forthwith. This action redirects public resources away from intermittent generation sources that have contributed to higher wholesale electricity prices and restores fiscal neutrality in energy policy.Projects that are suspended shall be required to undergo full financial audits and cost-benefit analysis for the Australian community, without “environmental” weighting.

Forecast real-world outcomes include an immediate reduction in the electricity component of household and business bills by 10 to 15 percent within the first year, lower wholesale prices through restored merit-order dispatch of reliable baseload capacity, and redirection of approximately $10 billion per annum in foregone subsidies toward productive tax relief and infrastructure.

Subsidies for intermittent renewables have distorted investment signals, inflated system costs through backup requirements and network upgrades, and transferred wealth from taxpayers and consumers to foreign-owned developers. Suspension removes this market distortion, realigns prices with actual generation costs, and frees fiscal capacity for measures that directly support employment and living standards. 
 
5. Establishment of a National Resources Sovereignty Committee
 
A dedicated National Resources Sovereignty Committee shall be constituted with statutory authority to suspend operation of all carbon trading schemes and associated liabilities; accelerate approvals for oil and gas exploration and production on existing leases; identify and designate three sites suitable for construction of large-scale domestic refineries; initiate coal-to-liquids fuel production facilities with expedited environmental approval pathways; audit existing coal-fired generation sites and enable installation of additional generating capacity where spare infrastructure permits; and repeal all legislative prohibitions on nuclear energy development and expedite feasibility studies for small modular reactor technology.

These directives prioritise secure, dispatchable domestic energy supply and reduce reliance on imported fuels and volatile international markets.
Forecast real-world outcomes include a 20 to 30 percent reduction in domestic fuel and electricity prices within 36 months, creation of at least 15,000 direct and indirect jobs in resource regions, elimination of carbon-trading compliance costs for industry, and restored energy self-sufficiency that insulates the economy from global price shocks.

Australia possesses abundant proven reserves of coal, gas, and uranium. Removing artificial regulatory and ideological barriers unleashes these resources for domestic use, lowers input costs across manufacturing and transport, improves the trade balance by retaining more value onshore, and delivers dispatchable power at the lowest long-run marginal cost.

6. Implementation of a Targeted 12,5 Percent Windfall Tax on LNG Exports

A 12.5 percent ad valorem royalty shall apply to LNG export revenues. This shall consist of:

  • A 7.5 percent ad valorem royalty component levied by the Commonwealth on the realised royalty value (the export sales value on an arm’s-length, FOB-equivalent basis, less allowable deductions for reasonable transport and packaging costs incurred up to the point of first sale);

  • An additional 5 percent ad valorem component levied by the relevant state government(s) on the same royalty value base.

The royalty shall be levied on the full royalty value in each quarter, replicating the structure and valuation methodology used for iron ore exports under Western Australia’s royalty regime.

Key design features include ring-fenced allocation of all proceeds (both Commonwealth and state shares) to an Australian Energy Relief Fund dedicated exclusively to household electricity rebates, funding the elevated tax-free threshold, SME protection measures, and domestic energy infrastructure projects; non-retrospective application, exclusion from domestic gas sales, and a built-in review mechanism; mandatory quarterly public reporting on collections and fund disbursements to ensure full transparency; immediate inclusion that domestic supply be guaranteed on a most favoured nation basis prior to export; and a full review of all gas export licences to ensure contracts are in the interests of Australia.

This mechanism, replicating the proven ad valorem royalty system successfully applied to iron ore in Western Australia (where the state royalty rate is typically 7.5% with additional federal overlays or adjustments in practice), ensures a fair and consistent share of Australia’s finite natural resources returns to Australian taxpayers and households. Historical data on LNG export values demonstrate that export revenues have disproportionately benefited exporters while domestic energy costs have risen sharply.

The proposed royalty corrects this imbalance without deterring long-term investment in the sector, as evidenced by the iron ore sector’s continued strong investment and production under its royalty regime.

Forecast real-world outcomes include generation of substantial additional revenue over time depending on global price and volume cycles, full funding of the $50,000 tax-free threshold and SME protections without increasing public debt, direct rebates that cut average household energy bills by $400 to $600 per year, and accelerated domestic refinery and coal-to-liquids projects that further lower fuel prices.

All LNG export licences shall be reviewed to include a ‘most-favoured-nation’ clause that ensures Australia has access to its entire domestic demand before export commitments are met.

LNG is an exhaustible national resource. A standard 12.5 percent ad valorem royalty on export revenues, modelled after iron ore, recycles resource rents into domestic relief and infrastructure, improves the terms of trade for Australian households, maintains investment incentives, and ensures that resource rents accrue first to citizens rather than foreign shareholders.

These proposals rest on established principles of sound public finance: protecting productive enterprise, enhancing labour supply incentives, eliminating inefficient subsidies, and securing sovereign control over strategic resources. Implementation will strengthen fiscal sustainability, support employment, and improve energy affordability for all Australians.

7. Declaring Agriculture as an Essential Service – Granting Fuel & Fertilizer Security Critical National Security Status

Agriculture forms the foundation of Australia’s food security, export earnings, and rural prosperity. The Australian Lobby Group calls for the immediate formal declaration of agriculture as an essential service under national emergency and critical infrastructure frameworks. Fuel supply (including diesel for on-farm machinery, transport, and processing) and fertiliser supply chains must be designated as matters of critical national security.

Specific measures include:

  • Guaranteed priority access to fuel during any national or regional emergency, supply disruption, or crisis, with explicit protections for agricultural operations.

  • Development of strategic national stockpiles and diversified international supply agreements for fertiliser to guard against geopolitical risks, trade blockades, global shortages, or price shocks.

  • Immediate feasibility study into restarting Urea production at Gibson Island (QLD) and fast tracking Perdaman completion (WA).

  • Integration of agriculture into national critical infrastructure planning, ensuring priority in energy allocation, port access, transport corridors, and emergency response protocols.

  • Cross-portfolio coordination between Defence, Agriculture, Energy, and Trade departments to treat disruptions to agricultural inputs as direct threats to national resilience and sovereignty.

Outcomes include enhanced resilience against global supply shocks (as seen in recent fertiliser price spikes and shipping disruptions), protection of Australia’s $80+ billion agricultural export sector, prevention of food price volatility and potential shortages, safeguarding of hundreds of thousands of jobs in farming, processing, and regional communities, and strengthened sovereign food production capacity that reduces reliance on imported inputs.

Australia’s vast arable land and productive farming sector are strategic national assets.

Treating agriculture as essential and securing its critical inputs (fuel and fertiliser) prevents cascading failures in the food supply chain, insulates rural economies from external shocks, maintains Australia’s reputation as a reliable global food supplier, and ensures that national security policy properly recognises the foundational role of domestic food production in times of crisis or isolation.

Closing

As long as Net Zero legislation and emissions regulations remain in place, Australia cannot achieve genuine energy security. Nor can we sustain or rebuild critical industries like domestic fertiliser production.

The Safeguard Mechanism, the carbon trading framework, and all associated emissions obligations act as structural barriers to sovereign production. They must be repealed.

We acknowledge that some existing contracts and international obligations may need to be honoured in the short term. That is a reasonable good faith concession. But the underlying legislative architecture itself, the entire Net Zero policy framework, must be systematically wound back and removed.

The energy and cost of living crisis Australia is living through right now is not an accident. It is the direct and predictable consequence of policy choices that prioritised emissions optics and global virtue signalling over operational reality, industrial strength, and the national interest.

Energy security, affordable power, and sovereign capability cannot coexist with the current emissions straitjacket. The architecture must go.

The Australian Lobby Group urges immediate parliamentary consideration and passage of these measures.

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