Originally published by Patrick J Byrne of The Spectator Australia
13.04.2026
How could Australia be suffering a double energy crisis when the nation exports several times more energy than it consumes and far more than the United States, which has no energy crisis?
Looking to the US, what needs to be done to ensure Australia’s energy security?
Australia has had a decade of warnings of possible energy crises, so one might have expected Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, in his three-minute-17-second address to the nation on April 1, to report on Australia’s serious lack of liquid fuels and fertiliser security; our soaring electricity prices destroying the nation’s manufacturing and other businesses; the nation’s poor resilience capabilities in the face of external threats; and our miserable lack of any defence muscle.
All these concerns are being laid bare by the oil crisis in the Persian Gulf, specifically in the Strait of Hormuz, through which flows 20 per cent of the world’s oil and much of Australia’s oil.
One might have expected the Prime Minister to announce urgent short-term plans to overcome our liquid fuel shortages, priority rationing of fuel, and medium-term plans to make the nation more self-sufficient in liquid fuels, given that Australia imports 80-90 per cent of its oil over long, vulnerable supply chains.
Instead, there were only meagre measures to mitigate high fuel prices, Australians being asked to rely more on public transport and work more from home.
The Australian quipped that the Prime Minister’s address ‘was no Gettysburg Address’; more [like] ‘Dame Edna on a bad night’.
The only subsequent helpful government announcement was that it will bargain our energy exports for continued oil shipments to our shores.
Very little, very late.
Diesel dependence
Australia’s vast distances between cities, from farms to supermarkets and from mines to ports mean the country runs on diesel, petrol, and aviation fuel. A senior farm leader told me that chronic regional diesel and petrol shortages are happening when most farmers have not yet stocked up on fuel and fertilisers as they are still assessing the prospects for the next planting season. If fuel supplies are not stabilised, food prices will rise sharply, he warned.
Diesel-powered locomotives deliver coal to power stations to generate most of the nation’s electricity. Without diesel, electricity supply is threatened.
Doubling the price of diesel forces up transport costs, which impacts the nation’s huge fleet of trucks transporting goods across the country. The resulting costs-push inflation will affect every sector of the economy, driving up interest rates.
Businesses and those with mortgages will be hit hard.
Fossil fuel dependence
The industries that built Australia relied on cheap brown and black coal. Yet, as Australia earned huge returns from its vast mineral and energy exports, tens of billions of dollars have been invested to stake the nation’s future on renewables – wind farms, solar farms, subsidies for household solar panels and batteries, and vast new transmission infrastructure.
What have we got from these massive investments? Despite the hype about big increases in the capacity of renewable energy, and short periods when renewables contribute significant inputs to the electricity grid, the overall amount of power delivered has been minute. In the end, it is not capacity that counts, but delivery of reliable constant power to the grid.
The website of Minister Chris Bowen’s Federal Department of Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Water (DCCEEW) tells the real story. It annually publishes data showing the Total Australian Energy Flows. Figure 1 (below) shows the sources of all energy consumed in Australia (electricity, transport, industries, etc.) for 2023-24:
- 5 per cent only came from solar and wind.
- 4 per cent from hydro, wood, biofuels, and biogases, and bagasse (fibre from crushed sugar cane burned to power sugar mills).
- 91 per cent from fossil fuels (coal, gas, liquid fuels).

Figure 1. Australian energy use by type, 2023-24
Sources: Australian Energy Flows 2023-24, DCCEEW, Petajoules. Uranium Energy Account, Australia, ABS.
Two crises despite huge exports
Paradoxically, boasting 14 per cent of the world’s coal, 32 per cent of the world’s uranium and huge gas reserves, Australia is a huge energy exporter at the same time it is experiencing energy crises.
Figure 2 (below) shows that, while Australia produces and uses 4,157 petajoules of energy of many types, and imports and uses 2,302 petajoules of mostly liquid fuels annually, the nation exports a whopping 18,018 petajoules of coal, gas, condensate oil and uranium.

Figure 2. What Australia Produces & Uses, Imports & Uses, and Exports (Petajoules), 2023-24
Sources: Australian Energy Flows 2023-24, DCCEEW, Petajoules. Uranium Energy Account, Australia, ABS.
To put that in perspective, Table 1 (below) shows that Australia’s net energy exports are 15,698 petajoules, 13 times America’s net exports of 1,204 petajoules!

Table 1: U.S. vs Australian Energy Production, Consumption, Imports and Exports
Source: ‘US energy facts explained’, US Energy Information Administration. Australian Energy Flows 2023-24, DCCEEW, Petajoules. Uranium Energy Account, Australia, ABS.
Question: How is it that the US has no energy crisis while Australia confronts two energy crises simultaneously?
First, Australia is facing a potentially chronic shortage of liquid fuels as the world recoils from Iran’s closure of the Persian Gulf, while federal and state governments have imposed restrictions on exploration for new oil and/or gas fields.
Australia has conventional gas and oil deposits, and extensive unconventional energy deposits (mainly shale oil), yet to be explored for commercial viability. However, since 2012, investment in exploration has collapsed 80 per cent as governments pursued renewables and imposed restrictions on fossil fuels.
Moreover, draconian government bans and restrictions are impeding exploration.
The NSW government announced a 77 per cent reduction in land available for gas exploration in 2021, and banned offshore oil and gas exploration and mining in 2024. In Victoria, the Labor government used a combination of legislative bans, narrowed scientific parameters, and geographic exploration exclusions to effectively pre-determine that the state did not have gas reserves sufficient for its long-term needs.
Second, Australia faces electricity shortages and rising prices that are crippling businesses as coal-fired power stations close. The Australian Energy Market Operator has repeatedly warned of looming electricity reliability ‘gaps’ in Australia’s eastern states due to these closures, renewable project delays and rising demand, as the nation relentlessly pursues Net Zero emissions by 2050.
Demand for all forms of energy is rising with Australia’s growing population, and the massive AI boom. Bloomberg reported that by 2025, energy hungry data centres had expanded 5.8 times globally since 2018 and almost three times since ChatGPT was introduced in 2022.
Learn from the US
After about 60 years of being a net energy importer, the US became a net exporter in 2019.
Both Republican and Democrat Presidents since George W. Bush Jnr have expanded energy production. The primary driver was technological advances in horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing (fracking) that unlocked massive tight oil and shale gas reserves. The biggest period of expansion was under President Obama.
In addition, US tech giants are now investing in nuclear power to embrace AI. President Donald Trump recently signed a $US40 billion partnership agreement with Japan to build next-generation, small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs).
Shortsightedly, Australia’s federal and state governments have banned the domestic use of the nation’s vast uranium resources.
What policies are needed?
Immediately:
- Prioritise farmers, road transport, ports, essential services and diesel locomotive trains hauling coal to power stations, and ration fuel if necessary.
- Use Australia’s gas exports as a bargaining chip to keep liquid fuels arriving from overseas refineries.
- Announce incentives for oil and gas exploration, and to convert cars from petrol and diesel to gas.
- Beg the US to supply Australia with fuel before Trump curtails exports.
In the medium term:
- Restore second world war fuel-storage depots and build large new storages across the country.
- Spend the necessary billions to restore, and build new, oil refineries capable of handling all grades of crude oil.
- Make Australia liquid-fuel self-sufficient by bringing in the US shale-oil and gas extraction technology that delivered energy self-sufficiency to the US.
- Repeal federal and state prohibitions on nuclear power and begin ordering small modular nuclear reactors – ride on the back of the US-Japan SMR deal.
These are the things the Prime Minister should have been announcing with great gusto in his April 1 address to the nation.
Patrick J. Byrne is the immediate past national president of the National Civic Council.