Queensland’s Energy Roadmap Explained in 3 Minutes (And What It Means for Your Power Bill)
Queensland has released its 2025 Energy Roadmap — a long, technical document full of modelling, pathways and engineering language.
Here’s the part that actually matters for households:
You’re not getting $1,000. But you’re also not being charged $1,000 either.
The Roadmap shows that under the previous “fast transition” strategy, Queensland’s energy system would have cost around $26 billion more to 2035. That extra spend would likely have flowed through to households as about $1,035 a year in higher bills.
Instead, the new plan slows the pace of asset closures, keeps the system stable and focuses on getting better value out of what Queensland already owns — while still moving towards cleaner energy.
1. Existing coal runs to the end of its technical life
Coal plants are no longer being pushed into early retirement on political timelines. They will close at the end of their technical lives, not years ahead of schedule.
2. Spend smarter, not faster
The Roadmap prioritises maintaining and upgrading existing assets before spending billions on new infrastructure.
3. Firming and storage where it actually matters
The plan adds flexible gas generation, battery storage and targeted transmission upgrades — not mega-projects that blow out budgets.
4. A smoother transition instead of a hard shock
The Roadmap still heads toward a cleaner system, but with three clear priorities: affordability, reliability and sustainability.
In plain language: don’t tear down the old house before the new one is finished.
So what does this mean for your home?
- You avoid that ~$1,000 per year bill increase.
- You don’t have to change anything to benefit.
- It buys time for cheaper renewables and storage to come online responsibly.
Where Compare Your Rates fits in
The Energy Roadmap doesn’t instantly change your bill — but it highlights why it’s important to compare your current plan, check rebates and review your usage regularly.
Our job at Compare Your Rates is to simplify that, without jargon or pressure.
Curious how your energy plan stacks up?
If this energy update has you wondering whether you’re overpaying for power, you’re not alone. Many households are reviewing their plans during this transition period to avoid rising costs.
Start an energy bill check How Compare Your Rates worksCompare Your Rates is an information and comparison service, not an energy retailer, lender or credit provider. We do not provide financial or credit advice. If you request it, we may introduce you to a licensed professional.