Commercial Energy Report – March 2026

Watt Utilities Commercial Energy Report

Each month, Watt Utilities publishes this Commercial Energy Market Report to keep our clients informed about wholesale electricity price movements across Australia’s east coast. We cover what happened in the spot market, why prices moved, and what it means for businesses managing energy costs. A new edition is released around the 20th of the following month.

Australia’s electricity grid operates through the National Electricity Market (NEM), which connects Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia via a shared transmission network. Wholesale spot prices are set every five minutes through a competitive bidding process managed by AEMO (the Australian Energy Market Operator), the independent body responsible for operating the NEM and ensuring reliable electricity supply. The prices in this report reflect the wholesale spot market and are distinct from the retail rates businesses pay on their energy bills, though sustained movements in the spot market generally feed into retail contract pricing over time.

AT A GLANCE: MARCH 2026
  • Spot prices fell across the board. All four mainland states came in lower than February. VIC was the cheapest at $44.74/MWh, NSW the most expensive at $70.36. If you’re on a spot-linked product, March was a welcome relief.
  • But future contracts moved in the opposite direction. Forward electricity prices for FY27 and FY28 rose sharply through March, driven by global energy market volatility. What retailers will charge for new contracts has gone up, even while current spot prices are low.
  • Is now a good time to lock in? That depends on your state and your renewal window. NSW and QLD forward prices are at their highest levels in months. Businesses with contracts expiring in the next 6 to 12 months are facing a materially different pricing environment than six months ago.
  • State comparison at a glance. VIC was the most stable and lowest-priced state in March. SA had the widest daily swings but a reasonable monthly average. QLD and NSW sit mid-range (QLD trending down, NSW recovering from a volatile February).
  • The detail matters. Read on for a state-by-state breakdown, the forward contract position, and what the fuel mix tells us about price risk over the next quarter.

Detailed Market Summary

SA South Australia recorded the most volatile daily price profile of the month, with strong renewable output driving zero-and-negative intervals in early and late March, offset by a wind drop on 24 March that pushed the daily average to $130.61/MWh. One five-minute interval reached $1,001.00/MWh. SA’s monthly average settled at $52.80/MWh, down 5.7% on February’s $56.00.
VIC Victoria averaged $44.74/MWh for March, virtually unchanged from February’s $45.06/MWh, the smallest movement across all mainland states. Strong solar and wind output drove 2,430 zero-or-negative intervals. A mid-month period of firmer demand lifted daily averages above $100/MWh between 16 and 19 March before easing as conditions normalised through the final fortnight.
QLD Queensland averaged $62.64/MWh, down 10.3% from February’s $69.87. Mild autumn conditions reduced demand, and consistent coal and renewable output kept generation ample through the month. Zero-or-negative intervals totalled 994, reflecting solid solar contribution. The 19 March peak of $118.50/MWh daily average was brief and aligned with a NEM-wide demand event rather than any Queensland-specific supply constraint.
NSW New South Wales averaged $70.36/MWh in March, down 16.0% from February’s $83.76/MWh. February had been elevated by administered price cap events; March saw no five-minute intervals above $1,000/MWh and 490 zero-or-negative intervals. Demand tracking was broadly in line with seasonal norms, and no major generation outages affected price outcomes through the month.
FY27 and FY28 swap contracts saw upward pressure across all mainland states through March, with the most pronounced moves in NSW and QLD. FY27 closing prices ranged from $79.76/MWh in VIC to $113.10/MWh in NSW. FY28 tracked similar direction, with NSW reaching $107.53/MWh by month end. Shell attributes the move to global commodity price increases following geopolitical disruption, flowing through to domestic forward markets.
LGC prices reached new lows in March, continuing a sustained decline driven by persistent oversupply and limited compliance-demand support. The Clean Energy Regulator’s 2026 Renewable Power Percentage of 16.67% (down from 17.91% in 2025) confirmed reduced liable demand for the year. Despite modest stabilisation late in the month, the broader market continued to reflect structurally long supply conditions.

NEM Average Spot Price

RRP: Feb 2026 vs March 2026

Source: Shell Energy / AEMO

State Average Spot Price Max 5 Min Spot Price 5 Min Intervals at $1,000+ 5 Min Intervals at $0 or Below
QLD $62.64 $253.38 0 994
NSW $70.36 $189.59 0 490
VIC $44.74 $273.81 0 2,430
SA $52.80 $1,001.00 1 2,730

Source: NEM Spot Market, AEMO (via Shell Energy Market Summary Report, March 2026)

NEM Average Spot Price: 3 Year Chart

Source: NEM Spot Market, AEMO. Chart Credit: Shell Energy. Historical data prior to Sep 2025 sourced from Shell Energy 3-year charts.

March 2026 pricing sits well below the mid-2024 and mid-2025 peaks that drove elevated retail contract rates for many businesses. The current combination of low spot prices and rising forward contracts reflects a market pricing in future risk that spot conditions alone do not yet show. For businesses with contracts expiring in the next 12 months, the gap between current spot outcomes and FY27 forward prices is a key reference point.

Contracting Outlook

FY27 contracts closed March at $92.46/MWh in QLD and $113.10/MWh in NSW, with VIC at $79.76 and SA at $92.84. FY28 sat slightly lower across all states, ranging from $77.47/MWh (VIC) to $107.53/MWh (NSW). Both curves saw upward pressure through March, driven by global commodity market volatility flowing into domestic forward pricing.

For businesses with contracts expiring in FY27 or FY28, the forward market is now pricing at a notable premium to current spot levels. March spot averaged $45 to $70/MWh across the mainland, while FY27 forwards sit $20 to $45/MWh above those levels depending on state. That gap reflects the market’s assessment of future supply risk, including potential commodity cost pass-through into generation costs.

Partial hedging offers a balance between locking in certainty now and retaining exposure if spot conditions remain favourable. A retreat in forward prices would require a material improvement in global commodity sentiment, which the market is not currently pricing.

State by State

New South Wales
$70.36/MWh
Monthly Average
-16.0% from Feb 2026 ($83.76)
0
High-Price Intervals
Above $1,000/MWh
490
Zero/Neg Intervals
Lowest mainland count

Market Rates

NSW averaged $70.36/MWh in March, down 16.0% from $83.76/MWh in February. No five-minute intervals exceeded $1,000/MWh, a sharp contrast to February when 11 intervals hit the $20,300/MWh administered price cap. The daily peak of $121.00/MWh occurred on 19 March.

Factors

Mild autumn temperatures reduced air conditioning load, and no major generation outages disrupted the market. Renewable output was consistent, with 490 zero-or-negative intervals recorded across the month. The 19 March peak was a brief NEM-wide demand event affecting all states simultaneously, not a NSW-specific constraint. The February administered price cap events ($20,300/MWh) are AEMO’s regulatory ceiling applied automatically when cumulative spot prices hit a threshold; they were absent in March, contributing to the sharp month-on-month improvement.

New South Wales: Daily Average RRP (March 2026)

Source: AEMO (via WEB_AVERAGE_PRICE_DAY_202603)

Queensland
$62.64/MWh
Monthly Average
-10.3% from Feb 2026 ($69.87)
0
High-Price Intervals
Above $1,000/MWh
994
Zero/Neg Intervals
Strong solar output

Market Rates

Queensland averaged $62.64/MWh in March, down 10.3% from $69.87/MWh in February. No five-minute intervals exceeded $1,000/MWh, and 994 zero-or-negative intervals were recorded. The daily peak of $118.50/MWh fell on 19 March.

Factors

Autumn demand moderation and strong coal baseload availability kept prices stable through most of the month. Consistent solar output underpinned the high zero-and-negative interval count. The 19 March spike was brief and driven by NEM-wide conditions rather than any Queensland-specific supply event. Early March saw the month’s lowest daily average of $30.44/MWh on 14 March, reflecting mild weather and ample overnight and morning generation.

Queensland: Daily Average RRP (March 2026)

Source: AEMO (via WEB_AVERAGE_PRICE_DAY_202603)

South Australia
$52.80/MWh
Monthly Average
-5.7% from Feb 2026 ($56.00)
1
High-Price Intervals
Above $1,000/MWh
2,730
Zero/Neg Intervals
Highest mainland count

Market Rates

South Australia averaged $52.80/MWh in March, down 5.7% from $56.00/MWh in February. One five-minute interval reached $1,001.00/MWh on 24 March, when wind generation fell sharply late in the day. SA recorded 2,730 zero-or-negative intervals, the highest count across the mainland states for the month. The daily average ranged from -$51.49/MWh on 13 March to $130.61/MWh on 24 March.

Factors

SA’s renewable-heavy generation mix produced its characteristically wide daily price range. The single $1,000+ interval on 24 March reflects a brief, genuine AEMO-published spot price spike during a wind-generation drop; at $1,001.00/MWh it is a standard high-price market event, not an administered price cap (the regulated cap of $20,300/MWh was not triggered). Ample solar and wind output through the rest of the month drove the high zero-or-negative interval count, particularly across the first two weeks of March when several days averaged below $0/MWh.

South Australia: Daily Average RRP (March 2026)

Source: AEMO (via WEB_AVERAGE_PRICE_DAY_202603)

Victoria
$44.74/MWh
Monthly Average
-0.7% from Feb 2026 ($45.06)
0
High-Price Intervals
Above $1,000/MWh
2,430
Zero/Neg Intervals
Strong wind and solar

Market Rates

Victoria averaged $44.74/MWh in March, down just 0.7% from $45.06/MWh in February. No five-minute intervals exceeded $1,000/MWh, and 2,430 zero-or-negative intervals were recorded across the month. The daily peak of $111.19/MWh on 19 March was the only day to exceed $110.

Factors

Strong wind and solar generation through most of the month kept average prices low and drove the high zero-or-negative interval count. The week of 16 to 19 March saw the only sustained period of elevated prices, as NEM-wide demand lifted briefly. The low of -$11.07/MWh on 8 March and the subsequent return to negative territory on several days reflected periods of excess renewable supply unable to be absorbed by demand or storage.

Victoria: Daily Average RRP (March 2026)

Source: AEMO (via WEB_AVERAGE_PRICE_DAY_202603)

AEMO Fuel Mix: Last 90 Days

1%
Battery
0%
Biomass
43%
Black Coal
15%
Brown Coal
3%
Gas
5%
Hydro
0%
Liquid Fuel
14%
Solar
18%
Wind
Generation Mix: 90-Day Period to March 2026

Source: Shell Energy Market Summary Report, March 2026 (AEMO fuel mix data)

Black coal and brown coal combined accounted for 58% of generation over the 90-day period, providing the baseload stability that kept spot prices from sustained volatility. Renewables contributed 37% in total (wind 18%, solar 14%, hydro 5%). Gas remained a modest but consistent balancing source at 3%. The high coal share continues to limit the price impact of short-term renewable output gaps.

Watt’s News

Major Platform Upgrade on Track for Late April Release

Our development team has been deep in a six-month project to modernise the technology underpinning how we serve clients. The build involves integrating a new CRM system with live energy retailer data and billing feeds from our RYO platform, connecting client portfolio information in a single view for the first time. The project goes live in late April 2026.

This is a meaningful upgrade to our day-to-day operations. Faster, more accurate access to client data means our team can respond more quickly to market movements and provide more timely guidance on contract positions. Our Watts Mine platform has incorporated AI-driven analysis for over two years, with capabilities and accuracy continuously improved. The new CRM and data integration layer extends that foundation, linking market intelligence directly to client-level energy and billing data.

Industry News

LNG Netback Price Surges 60% in March on Global Commodity Volatility

The ACCC long-run LNG netback price for the balance of 2026 surged 60.5% in March, rising from $12.90/GJ to $20.71/GJ, the largest monthly percentage increase since 2022. Shell attributes the move to global commodity market disruption. While domestic gas spot prices remained lower at around $9/GJ, the netback price rise has fed directly into forward electricity contract pricing across the mainland NEM, with FY27 and FY28 swap prices moving sharply higher through the month.
Source: ACCC / Shell Energy Market Summary Report, March 2026

Electricity Forward Contracts Reprice as Global Energy Risk Premium Rises

FY27 electricity swap contracts closed March at $113.10/MWh in NSW (up from $97.19 at the start of the month), $92.46 in QLD, $92.84 in SA and $79.76 in VIC. FY28 contracts moved in similar direction. Shell explicitly links the rally to global commodity price increases, with geopolitical disruption in the Middle East driving risk repricing across energy markets. For Australian businesses, the movement represents a material shift in the contract reference price for renewals through FY27 and FY28.
Source: ASX / Shell Energy Market Summary Report, March 2026

LGC Market Hits New Lows as Oversupply Persists

Large-scale Generation Certificate prices continued declining through March, reaching new lows amid persistent oversupply and limited compliance-driven demand. The Clean Energy Regulator’s 2026 Renewable Power Percentage (RPP) of 16.67% (down from 17.91% in 2025) confirmed a reduction in liable demand for the year, reinforcing the oversupply narrative. LGC prices are a component of retail energy contract costs; their continued softness provides a partial offset to rising wholesale forward prices for businesses contracting new agreements.
Source: Clean Energy Regulator / Shell Energy Market Summary Report, March 2026

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