EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
Select Legislative Instrument 2011 No. 116
Issued by the Authority of the Minister for Climate
Change and Energy Efficiency
Renewable Energy
(Electricity) Act 2000
Renewable Energy
(Electricity) Amendment Regulations 2011 (No. 3)
Section 161 of the Renewable
Energy (Electricity) Act 2000 (the Act) provides, in part, that the
Governor-General may make Regulations prescribing matters required or permitted
by the Act, or necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or
giving effect to the Act.
The Act, as amended by the Renewable Energy (Electricity)
Amendment Act 2010 (the Amendment Act) establishes the Renewable
Energy Target (RET) scheme to encourage electricity generation from eligible
energy sources. The RET is designed to ensure that the equivalent of 20 per
cent of Australia’s electricity supply is generated from renewable sources by
2020. From 1 January 2011, the RET has operated as two parts - the Large-scale Renewable Energy Target
(LRET) and the Small-scale Renewable Energy Scheme (SRES).
Under the Act, wholesale electricity purchasers (‘liable entities’)
are required to contribute to the RET in proportion to their share of the
national wholesale electricity market. The Act provides for the creation of
renewable energy certificates by renewable energy generators, small generation
units (SGUs) and solar water heaters. One certificate generally represents one
megawatt-hour (MWh) of electricity from eligible energy sources.
The Renewable Energy (Electricity) Regulations
2001 (the Principal Regulations) provide an administrative framework to
implement the Act in relation to power station accreditation, eligibility
requirements for renewable energy sources, eligibility requirements for solar
water heaters and SGUs, and calculation methods for determining the number of
certificates.
The Regulations amend the Principal
Regulations to preserve, under particular contractual and evidentiary
circumstances, a certificate multiplier of 4 in determining the number of
certificates able to be created for eligible SGUs installed between 1 July 2011
and 30 June 2012. This amendment implements the Government’s
commitment on 5 May 2011 to put in place transitional arrangements, to cover
supply/installation contracts entered into prior to 5 May 2011, around
regulatory amendments (made on 16 June 2011) to reduce the certificate
multiplier from 4 to 3 for SGU installations from 1 July 2011 to 30 June 2012.
The Regulations also make a minor technical amendment to the
Principal Regulations.
Background on the policy intent of the Regulations is
included in Attachment A. Details of the Regulations are included in Attachment
B.
Consultation
The Regulations implement the transitional arrangements as
part of adjustments to the Solar Credits mechanism announced by the
Commonwealth Government on 5 May 2011. The Regulations were informed by concerns
raised with the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency by a range
of stakeholders and by targeted industry consultation undertaken by the Department.
Authority: Section 161
of the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Act 2000
Attachment A
General policy guidance on the transitional arrangements
to be made through the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Amendment Regulations
2011 (No. 3)
On 5 May 2011, the Commonwealth
Government announced adjustments to the Solar Credits mechanism under the
small-scale component of the Renewable Energy Target (RET) scheme in light of
continued strong growth in the industry, the impact of this growth on
electricity prices, and the impact of the Solar Credits support on demand for
other clean energy technologies such as solar hot water heaters.
The
Solar Credits mechanism provides support for those installing small generation
units such as small-scale solar panels, wind and hydro electricity systems by
multiplying the number of small-scale technology certificates (STCs) that these
systems would usually be able to create under the Small-Scale Renewable Energy Scheme
(SRES) component of the RET. The level of support in terms of the
number of STCs received via the Solar Credits mechanism is determined by the
date the system is installed
Solar
Credits applies to the first 1.5 kilowatts (kW) of system capacity
installed for systems connected to main electricity grids and up to 20 kW of
capacity for off-grid systems. As a result of the adjustments made to the
Principal Regulations made on 16 June 2011, the
additional Solar Credits support under the SRES will be reduced to a multiple
of 3 rather than 4. The multipliers in following years will also be reduced by
one, thereby bringing forward the phase out of the Solar Credits mechanism by
one year to end on 30 June 2013.
As
part of the 5 May 2011 announcement, the Government also indicated that where
legally binding contracts were made prior to 5 May 2011 for eligible small
generation units installed between 1 July 2011 and 30 June 2012, it
would put in place transitional arrangements in the Principal Regulations to
enable the Solar Credits multiplier of 4 to apply to these installations, under
certain conditions.
Overview of Transitional Arrangements
The
transitional arrangements reflect the Government’s policy intent that parties to
a legally binding contract, made in good faith prior to 5 May 2011
under which a small generation system is supplied and installed after 30 June
2011 and before 1 July 2012 at a particular address, can avoid being
financially disadvantaged by the regulatory amendment to reduce the Solar
Credits multiplier from 4 to 3 for systems installed from 1 July 2011.
The
transitional arrangements made under the Principal Regulations specify the
contractual circumstances and related documentary requirements governing
eligibility to create STCs through Solar Credits under the multiplier of 4 for
systems installed after 30 June 2011 and before 1 July 2012.
Eligible contracts
The Regulations put transitional arrangements in place with the intent
eligible contracts for the supply and installation of a small generation unit at
a particular address must have been entered into before 5 May 2011 and be
legally binding on all parties on and after that date.
The term ‘contract’ has its legal meaning under the transitional
arrangements whereby all of the requirements necessary for the formation of a
binding contract between two or more parties must be satisfied. Under these
specific circumstances this means all parties to the contract had entered into
an agreement that includes an offer to supply and install a particular small
generation unit at a particular address, and under particular pricing
arrangements and acceptance of these terms before 5 May 2011.
As such, the Regulations exclude any contracts which as of 5 May 2011 had
not yet become legally binding on the parties. This excludes from eligibility
any contracts with a cooling-off period, either statutory or explicitly
included in the contract, where the cooling-off period remained in place on 5
May 2011 or later. The Regulations also exclude from eligibility any contracts
that include a ‘condition precedent’ (which describes a condition, obligation
or event that must come to pass before the contract is considered legally
binding), where that enabling condition has not been met before
5 May 2011. Further details on legally binding
contract conditions and eligibility are provided in Attachment B.
The transitional arrangements are intended to protect parties to a
legally binding contract for the final “retail-level” transaction for the
supply and installation of a small generation unit. These parties would
generally be a solar panel retailer and a home owner. Consequently the Regulations
also specify that any contracts not specifically linked to a particular address
or where neither party will own the system once installed will not be eligible
under the transitional arrangement. For example contracts between system
wholesalers and retail suppliers, or bulk supply contracts with builders or
residential developers where system addresses are not specified are not be
eligible under the transitional arrangements.
The Regulations also reflect the recognition that a legally binding
contract can be formed in writing or orally. These contracts may comprise:
·
a single document comprising both offer and acceptance that is
signed by both parties and clearly dated, setting out all the terms and conditions;
-
for example, a written contract drawn up by the small generation
unit retailer and signed by all relevant parties, which includes the intended
owner and address of the installed unit and outlines the unit specifications,
price, general terms and conditions and date the contract was made.
·
a series of related documents that together comprise offer and
acceptance, identifying the parties and setting out all the terms and
conditions including relevant contract dates;
-
for example, a chain of written documentation (which could
include letters, faxes and/or emails), between all relevant parties, which
includes the intended owner of the installed unit, where an offer is made and
accepted for the supply and installation of a specific unit at a particular address
at an agreed price and related terms.
·
an oral agreement which may include a documentary component or be
exclusively oral;
-
for example where an offer is made in writing or verbally, and
accepted by phone or handshake. In this case it can be reasonably expected that
written confirmation recording what the parties have agreed to and when it was
agreed, would follow shortly after the agreement is struck;
Documentary
requirements of eligible contracts
The
person entitled to create certificates under the transitional arrangements in
respect of a particular small generation unit installed at a particular address
must be able to demonstrate with documentation that the contract in respect to
that unit meets the eligibility requirements. The Regulations specify the
documentation requirements to be complied with, which depend on whether the
contract was in written or oral form before 5 May 2011.
To
avoid placing an undue administrative burden on the person creating
certificates under the transitional arrangements, the Regulations do not oblige
the person to provide the full documentary evidence along with their
application to create certificates, but instead oblige the applicant to
provide, prior to applying to create the certificates, statutory declarations under
the Statutory Declarations Act 1959 (the Act) including to the effect
that they possess the requisite documentation.
Statutory
declarations are written statements declared to be true in the presence of an
authorised witness. Under the Act, a person who wilfully makes a false
statement in a statutory declaration is guilty of a criminal offence equivalent to perjury and is punishable by
fines or jail, or both.
Noting that a legally binding contract can be formed in writing or
orally, two separate rules around provision of documentary evidence are provided:
The
Basic Rule - Contract documentation for a written contract.
This
basic rule applies where the person who is entitled to create certificates under
the transitional arrangements possesses documentation demonstrating that
a legally binding written contract was entered into before 5 May 2011. This
documentation could be:
·
a single document that includes both offer and acceptance that is
signed and dated by both parties, setting out the terms and conditions of
supply including address and expected date of installation as well as pricing
arrangements; or
·
a series of verifiable related documents (letters, emails, faxes,
written forms), all clearly dated prior to 5 May 2011 that together include
offer and acceptance, setting out the terms and conditions of supply including
address and expected date of installation as well as pricing arrangements.
Before
applying for the certificates on the on-line certificate registry administered
by the Office of the Renewable Energy Regulator (ORER), the entitled person
would need to obtain and provide to the ORER a statutory declaration stating
that the person possesses a copy of the legally binding contract or of the
series of related documents that together form the legally binding contract,
entered into before 5 May 2011 for a particular small generation unit installed
on or after 1 July 2011 and before 1 July 2012.
The Regulations
also oblige the entitled person to verify in the statutory declaration that the parties to the contract were
legally bound to proceed with the contract on and after 5 May 2011, that if the
contract was conditional on any event happening, the event happened before 5
May 2011 and that the owner of the unit was a
party to the contract.
To
assist the ORER in undertaking any required assessment of the application to
create certificates under the transitional arrangements, the Regulations also
specify that the entitled person must describe the pieces of contract
documentation, set out the following information and certify that the
information comes from the contract documentation:
·
the date the contract was signed (which must be before 5 May
2011);
·
the names, addresses and contact details of the parties to the
contract;
·
the address at which the unit was installed; and
·
the size, make and model of the unit.
Finally,
the Regulations also specify that the entitled person’s statutory declaration
must certify that the person can provide the contract documentation at the
request of the Renewable Energy Regulator.
Examples
of pieces of verifiable documentation that could contribute to demonstrating
compliance are outlined in Attachment B.
In
regard to the size, make and model of a small generation unit, there is often
some form of component substitution or variation with the actual installed
small generation unit due to unforeseen circumstances, including supply and
demand constraints.
Acknowledging
this fact, it is intended that small variations to components, make and model,
and system size would be acceptable as indicating the installed system for
which certificates are being applied for is, for the purposes of these
transitional arrangements, the system indicated in the agreement.
The
Supplementary Rule – written
documentation evidencing the existence of an oral contract.
In
circumstances where the legally binding contract made before 5 May 2011 may be
oral, for example where an offer is made in writing or orally and accepted by
phone or handshake (with written confirmation usually following some time
later), the Regulations reflect a supplementary rule.
In
light of the difficulty and administrative expense inherent in demonstrating
the existence and particularly the timing of an oral contract, and to address
the high risk of false claims, where the agreement is oral the Regulations
specify documentation is to clearly demonstrate that the contract existed and
that it was made before 5 May 2011.
To
allow reasonable time after 5 May 2011 for this confirming documentation to be
produced, while addressing the issue of potential false claims following
release of draft transitional arrangements for industry
consultation, the Regulations stipulate this confirming documentation must have
been created, and be clearly dated, no later than 9 June 2011.
Under
the Regulations, the person who is entitled to create certificates is required
to provide the same statutory declaration under the supplementary rule as that
specified under the basic rule.
In
addition, for an oral contract, before the entitled person can apply to create
certificates under the transitional arrangements, they must also obtain and
supply to the Renewable Energy Regulator signed statutory declarations from
each party to the contract (one being the owner of the unit after its
installation) stating that a legally binding contract was entered into before 5
May 2011. The declarations are to also to set out the following:
·
the names, addresses and contact details of the parties to the
agreement;
·
the form and date on which the legally binding contact was
entered into;
·
the address at which the unit was installed; and
·
the size, make and model of the unit.
Where
the supplementary rule applies, the Regulations also specify that a statutory
declaration under this rule would not be required from a party to the contract
where that party is the person applying to create the certificates. This removes
the need for the eligible person to sign two statutory declarations that would
in effect contain the same information.
Following the submission of the required statutory declaration(s) to the
Renewable Energy Regulator under the basic or the supplementary rule, the Regulations
would enable the Renewable Energy Regulator to request any other information or
documents that it may require to ensure it can verify information provided in
the statutory declarations and be satisfied that the application provided by
the person entitled to create certificates under the transitional arrangements
is valid.
Proposed
bundling arrangements
Acknowledging
that the process for creation of certificates is often completed in bundles at
one time, for example where a person may be entitled to create certificates for
multiple small generation units, only one statutory declaration will be
required under the transitional arrangements where the basic rule has been met
for all relevant installed units.
Under
these circumstances the signed statutory declaration would still clearly identify
all installed units relevant to the application to create certificates and
include all the required information listed in the Regulations for each unit.
However,
where the supplementary rule applies, the relevant statutory declarations will
be required from the person entitled to create certificates and all parties to
the contract, as outlined above, for each installed unit.
Existing regulatory powers/requirements around provision and
retention of documentation.
The
record-keeping powers under Section 160 of the Renewable Energy
(Electricity) Act 2000, (the Principal Act) require, inter alia, that a
registered person (this would include a person creating certificates under the
proposed transitional arrangements) must keep, for at least 5 years after
creating or obtaining them, records that record and explain all transactions
and other acts engaged in, or required to be engaged in by the record-keeper
under the Principal Act.
In
addition, Part 11A - Information Gathering Powers - of the Principal Act
empowers the Renewable Energy Regulator to obtain information and documents
relevant to the operation of the Principal Act.
Summary
of the application of the transitional arrangements
|
Evidence of legallybinding
contract before 5 May 2011
|
Complies with Transitional
Arrangements
|
Rule
|
Stat Dec signed by person eligible to create STCs
|
Additional
Stat Decs signed by all parties to the contract
|
|
Copy of the written legally binding contract struck
before 5 May 2011 that meets the information requirements in the Regulations
|
Yes
|
Basic
|
Yes
(stating possession of the contract and
setting out/certifying required information)
|
No
|
|
Series of written evidence demonstrating the legally
binding written contract existed before 5 May 2011
|
Yes
|
Basic
|
Yes
(stating possession of documentation that fully
substantiates the contract and setting out/certifying required information)
|
No
|
|
Oral contract in place before 5 May 2011
evidenced by specified documentation
|
Yes
|
Supplementary
|
Yes
(stating possession of specified documentation and
setting out/certifying required information)
|
Yes
(stating the contract was in place before
5 May 2011 and setting out required information)
|
|
Oral contract with no or insufficient
written evidence
|
No
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Attachment B
Details of the Renewable Energy (Electricity)
Amendment Regulations 2011
(No. 3)
Regulation
1 – Name of Regulations
This regulation provides that the title of the Regulations is
the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Amendment Regulations 2011 (No. 3).
Regulation
2 – Commencement
This regulation provides for the Regulations to commence on 1
July 2011.
Regulation
3 – Amendment of Renewable Energy (Electricity) Regulations 2001
This regulation provides for Schedule 1 to the Regulations to
amend the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Regulations 2001.
Regulation 4 – Transitional
The
Solar Credits mechanism provides support for those installing small generation
units such as small-scale solar panels, wind and hydroelectricity systems by
multiplying the number of small-scale technology certificates (STCs) that these
systems would usually be able to create under the Small-Scale Renewable Energy
Scheme (SRES) component of the Renewable Energy Target (RET) scheme. The level of support in terms of the number of STCs received via Solar
Credits mechanism is determined by the date the system is installed
Under regulatory amendments made on 16 June
2011, this additional Solar Credits support under the SRES will be
reduced to a multiple of 3 rather than 4 on 1 July 2011. The multipliers in
following years will also be reduced by one, thereby bringing forward the phase
out of the Solar Credits mechanism by one year to end on 30 June 2013.
The new schedule of multipliers, which determines the additional STCs an eligible small
generation unit could create, is outlined in the following table.
Schedule
of Solar Credits Multipliers
|
Date
installed
|
9 June 2009 –
30 June 2011
|
1 July 2011 -
30 June 2012
|
1 July 2012 -
30 June 2013
|
From 1 July 2013 onwards
|
|
Solar Credits Multiplier
|
5
|
3
|
2
|
No multiplier (1)
|
Regulation 4 specifies the transitional arrangements to reflect the Government’s policy intent that parties to a
legally binding contract, made in good faith prior to 5 May 2011 (the
date of the public announcement of the reduction in the STC multiplier) under
which a small generation system is supplied and installed after 1 July 2011 and before
1 July 2012 at a particular address, can avoid being financially
disadvantaged by the regulatory amendment to reduce the Solar Credits
multiplier from 4 to 3 for systems installed in that period.
Regulation 4 stipulates the contractual circumstances and related
documentary requirements governing eligibility to create STCs through Solar
Credits under a multiplier of 4 for systems installed between 1 July 2011 and
1 July 2012.
Subregulation 4 (1) specifies that the regulatory amendments
made to reduce the Solar Credits multiplier from 4 to 3 in the period 1 July
2011 to 30 June 2012 do not apply to installations of small generation units
that were installed in that period where legally binding contracts for the
installations of those units at particular addresses were in place before 5 May 2011 and where the conditions specified in these Regulations
are met.
Paragraphs
4 (1) (a), (b), (c) and (d) together specify that the contract to supply and
install a small generation unit, where a party to the contract was the owner of
the unit after it was installed, was entered into and legally binding on all
parties to the contract before 5 May 2011.
The Regulations exclude any contracts, which as
of 5 May 2011 had not yet become legally binding on the parties. This would
exclude from eligibility any contracts with a cooling-off period, either
statutory or explicitly included in the contract, where the cooling-off period
remained in place on or after 5 May 2011. Where “cooling-off
arrangements” are not legally binding, that is, not specified
in the contract terms and conditions but offered informally between parties to
the contract, it is intended that these contracts would be eligible under the Regulations
provided they satisfy the other requirements.
The Regulations also exclude from eligibility any contracts that include
a ‘condition precedent’ (which describes a condition, obligation or event
that must occur before the contract is considered legally binding), where that
enabling condition has not been met before 5 May 2011. Such a
condition could have the effect that the contract doesn’t legally bind the
parties until, for example, formal finance or local planning approval has been
obtained.
To be
clear, contracts which have not yet become legally binding before 5 May 2011,
including for example where a specified cooling period has not expired or where
other pre‑conditions for the contract coming into force have not yet been met
before 5 May 2011, these contracts are not eligible under the transitional
arrangements.
However,
where legally binding contracts have been entered into before 5 May 2011
and include “conditions subsequent” that is, circumstances under which a party
may later withdraw (usually incurring some form of cost - for example if
delivery requirements are not able to be met or if permission to connect to the
grid is not provided), these contracts would be eligible provided they satisfy
the other requirements.
Paragraph
4 (1) (e) specifies the particular matters that must be
identified in the contract documentation, namely:
·
the date the contracted was entered into, which must be before
5 May 2011;
·
the identities of each party to the contract, which must include
the owner of the unit following its installation as a party to the contract;
·
the address at which the unit was installed; and
·
the size, make and model of the unit.
Paragraph
4 (1) (f) specifies that the person entitled to create STCs for the installed
unit, who typically would either be the owner the installed unit or another
person to whom the unit owner has transferred the right
to create the STCs, must meet the specified requirements in subregulation 4 (2) before creating the STCs for the unit.
Subregulation 4 (2) specifies the requirements that must be met by
the the person entitled to create STCs for the installed unit before creating the certificates to demonstrate that the
contract in respect to that unit meets the conditions for
eligibility under subregulation 4 (1).
To
avoid placing an undue administrative burden on the entitled person to create
certificates utilising the transitional arrangements, subregulation 4 (2) does
not oblige the entitled person to provide the full
documentary evidence along with their applications to create STCs,
but instead obliges the entitled person to provide one
or more statutory declarations under the Statutory Declarations Act 1959 (the
Act) including to the effect that they possess the requisite
documentation.
Statutory
declarations are written statements declared to be true in the presence of an
authorised witness. Under the Act, a person who wilfully makes a false
statement in a statutory declaration is guilty of a criminal offence equivalent
to perjury and is punishable by fines or jail, or both.
Paragraph
4 (2) (a)
specifies that the person entitled to create STCs for the installed unit must have in their possession the required contract documentation
identifying the matters mentioned in paragraph 4 (1) (e). Subregulation 4 (6) specifies what contract documentation means
for written and oral contracts.
Paragraph
4 (2) (b) specifies that the person entitled to create STCs for the installed
unit must provide the Regulator with a statutory declaration:
·
describing the contract documentation, for
example by listing and briefly outlining the nature of each document
demonstrating the eligibility of the contract;
·
confirming that they can provide this
documentation if requested by the Renewable Energy Regulator;
·
verifying that the parties to the
contract were legally bound to proceed with the contract on and after 5 May
2011;
·
verifying that if commencement of the contract was conditional on
any event happening, the event happened before 5 May 2011; and
·
verifying that the owner of the unit after it
was installed was a party to the contract.
Subparagraph 4 (2) (b) (iv) and (v) together assist the Renewable Energy Regulator undertake any required assessment
of the application to create certificates under the Regulations,
by obligating the entitled person to set out the contract documentation information specified in paragraph
4 (1) (e) and certify that the information included in the statutory
declaration comes from that contract documentation.
In regard to subparagraph 4 (1) (e) (iv)
which refers to the size, make and model of a small generation unit identified
in the contract documentation, there is often some form of component
substitution or variation with the actual installed small generation unit due
to unforeseen circumstances, including supply and demand constraints. It is
intended that small variations to components, make and model, and system size
would be acceptable as indicating the installed system for which certificates
are being applied for is, for the purposes of these transitional arrangements,
the system indicated in the contract.
Paragraph 4 (2) (c) specifies that in circumstances where the contract
is an oral contract the person entitled to create STCs for the installed
unit must obtain and supply to the Renewable
Energy Regulator signed statutory declarations from
each party to the contract (one being the owner of the unit after its
installation) verifying that a legally binding contract was entered into before
5 May 2011 by setting
out and certify the same matters as outlined in
paragraph 4 (1) (e).
Paragraph 4 (2) (d) enables the Renewable Energy Regulator to request
any other information or documentation in order to satisfy itself that an
eligible legally binding contract that meets the conditions outlined in
subregulation 4 (1) was in place prior to registering STCs for an installed small generation unit
under the Regulations.
Subregulations 4 (3) and 4 (4) enables the
entitled person who has the right to create STCs for more
than one small generation unit installed under one or
more written contracts to provide one statutory declaration under paragraph 4 (2) (b) encompassing all relevant units.
Under
these circumstances the signed statutory declaration would still clearly
identify all installed units relevant to the application to create certificates
as well as include all the required information listed in paragraph
4 (2) (b) for each unit.
However, where small generation units have
been installed on the basis of oral contracts, separate relevant
statutory declarations will be required from the entitled person
as outlined in paragraph 4 (2) (b), for each
installed unit.
Subregulation 4 (5) specifies that where the
entitled person to create STCs is also a party to an oral contract, they will
not have to sign a second similar statutory declaration under
paragraph 4 (2) (c) as the required information is to be provided through the
entitled person providing a statutory declaration under paragraph 4 (2)
(b).
Subregulation
4 (6) specifies the meaning of the term ‘contract documentation’ in relation to
written and oral contracts for the purpose of the Regulations.
For
written contracts, contract documentation consists of written documents that
set out the terms and conditions of the contract and evidencing the offer and
acceptance of those terms and conditions before 5 May 2011.
Typically
this would comprise a single written document such as a contract drawn up by
the small generation unit retailer and signed by all relevant parties, which
includes the intended owner and address of the installed unit, outlines the
unit specifications, price, general terms and conditions and date the contract
was made. However, contract documentation could also consist of a series of
verifiable related documents (letters, emails, faxes, written forms), all
clearly dated prior to 5 May 2011 that together include an offer
and acceptance, setting out the terms and conditions of supply including
address and expected date of installation as well as pricing arrangements.
Examples
of pieces of verifiable documentation that could contribute to demonstrating the existence of a legally binding contract in place before 5 May
2011 include:
·
a written quote, including terms and conditions, for a particular
system to be installed at a particular address before 5 May 2011;
·
written proof that a monetary deposit was paid (e.g. bank
debit/credit note, credit card debit or cheque clearance document) before 5 May
2011;
·
sale confirmation documentation dated before 5 May 2011;
·
applications dated before 5 May 2011 to relevant
retail/distribution service providers seeking to connect a particular system to
the grid at a particular address; or
·
other time-stamped communications (which may be letters, emails,
faxes, quotes and confirming orders, dated before 5 May 2011) between the unit
supplier and owner of the installed unit confirming the agreement, price and
address to install the unit.
For oral contracts,
the term contract documentation means written documentation that was
created and clearly dated before 10 June 2011,
evidencing the existence of the legally binding contract
before 5 May 2011. This documentation, which would typically be a document from
the supplier to the purchaser confirming details of the agreement, is to clearly
identify include as a minimum the following information:
·
the date the contracted was entered into, which must be before
5 May 2011;
·
the identities of each party to the contract, which must include
the owner of the unit following its installation as a party to the contract;
·
the address at which the unit was installed; and
·
the size, make and model of the unit.
The pre-10 June 2011 cut-off date is set to allow
reasonable time after 5 May 2011 for this confirming documentation to be
produced, while addressing the issue of potential false claims following
release of the draft transitional arrangements for
industry consultation.
Schedule
1 – Amendments
Items 1 and 2 – Subregulations 22ZA (1) and (2)
Items 1 and 2
together insert subregulation 22ZA (3), which specifies that when a liable entity’s partial exemption
calculated for a year in accordance with subregulation 22ZA (1) is a negative amount, the
entity’s partial exemption for the year is zero.
The
purpose of the amendment is to reflect the policy intent that a partial
exemption certificate is not intended to penalise the liable entity to whom it
relates. For practical purposes where the calculation methodology yields a
negative amount of partial exemption for a particular liable entity, year, site
and eligible emissions-intensive trade-exposed activity, the amount appearing
on the associated partial exemption certificate is to be zero, rather than the
negative number which would imply a penalty.