Commercial Energy Report – December 2025

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. This report covers the mainland NEM only (Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia).

AT A GLANCE

December 2025 saw spot prices ease across the mainland NEM as mild summer weather and strong renewable generation created favourable supply conditions. Despite price spikes above $1,000/MWh in NSW (12 intervals) and SA (5 intervals), average pricing fell across all four mainland states. NSW recorded the highest average at $71.36/MWh while Victoria delivered the lowest outcome at $27.51/MWh. The Christmas period brought minimum demand challenges, with SA reaching -311MW and VIC hitting 1,289MW, requiring AEMO minimum system load interventions. Forward contract markets continued to soften as participants priced in structural shifts from battery storage expansion and renewable capacity growth.

Detailed Market Summary

SA South Australia averaged $27.92/MWh (down 14.0% from November), recording 4,375 intervals at or below zero pricing across the month, the highest count among mainland states. Five high-price intervals peaked at $20,299.99/MWh during brief wind lulls. Operational demand fell to -311MW on December 26, requiring AEMO MSL2 intervention as Christmas period solar generation created pronounced oversupply.
VIC Victoria averaged $27.51/MWh (down 13.8%), delivering the lowest mainland outcome for December with zero high-price intervals above $1,000/MWh. Wind generation performed strongly throughout the month and coal plant availability improved. Christmas Day minimum demand of 1,289MW triggered MSL1 conditions, reflecting the state’s growing renewable generation surplus during low-demand holiday periods.
QLD Queensland averaged $54.38/MWh (down 13.8%), recording zero high-price events above $1,000/MWh despite notable coal generation outages throughout the month. Strong solar output created consistent supply patterns, with 2,461 intervals at or below zero pricing. The state maintained the most stable pricing pattern across the mainland NEM for December.
NSW New South Wales averaged $71.36/MWh (down 7.2%), recording the highest mainland average for December. Twelve high-price intervals above $1,000/MWh occurred as heat-driven demand coincided with four of twelve coal units offline. Transmission constraints in south-central NSW amplified pricing pressures during peak periods, with maximum demand exceeding 13GW on December 18 and 19.
Calendar Year 2026 forward contract prices declined across all mainland regions through December as market participants priced in structural changes from battery storage deployment and new renewable capacity additions expected to dampen future volatility. The broad softening reflected expectations of improved supply adequacy rather than any response to December’s relatively contained spot conditions.
The Christmas and Boxing Day period produced notable minimum system load events across the mainland NEM. South Australia’s negative operational demand on December 26 required AEMO’s MSL2 intervention protocol, while Victoria’s Christmas Day minimum triggered MSL1 conditions. These events reflect the market’s growing exposure to variable renewable generation and the increasing role battery storage plays in absorbing excess solar supply during low-demand periods.

NEM Average Spot Price

RRP: Nov 2025 vs December 2025

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 $54.38 $379.67 0 2,461
NSW $71.36 $14,001.01 12 2,087
VIC $27.51 $324.26 0 3,654
SA $27.92 $20,299.99 5 4,375

Source: NEM Spot Market, AEMO (via Shell Energy Market Summary Report, December 2025)

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.

December 2025 pricing continues the downward trajectory that followed the June 2025 volatility peak, with all four mainland states tracking at or near multi-year lows. The sustained softening reflects improved supply adequacy as summer shoulder conditions reduced demand and renewables performed strongly. For businesses currently exposed to spot-linked or recently expired contracts, December’s conditions represent a material improvement on the elevated levels seen through mid-2025.
Contracting Outlook

Calendar Year 2026 contracts saw downward pressure across all mainland regions through December, with market participants pricing in structural changes rather than current spot volatility. Battery storage deployment and new renewable capacity additions are expected to reduce future price spikes, and that expectation is reflected in where forward prices are trading. For businesses with contract renewals approaching in early-to-mid 2026, the current forward curve offers a more competitive reference point than the elevated levels seen during the June 2025 volatility period. Longer-dated positions beyond CY2026 carry uncertainty around how quickly new capacity delivers structural price reductions at scale. Businesses with near-term renewals are positioned reasonably to engage the market. Those with more lead time may find value in monitoring FY27 pricing as the capacity pipeline becomes clearer through 2026.

State by State

New South Wales
$71.36/MWh
Monthly Average
-7.2% from Nov 2025 ($76.93)
12
High-Price Intervals
Above $1,000/MWh
2,087
Zero/Neg Intervals
Below mainland average

Market Rates

Average pricing decreased to $71.36/MWh in December, a 7.2% decline from November’s $76.93/MWh. Volatility events during the mid-month heat period drove the maximum five-minute interval to $14,001.01/MWh.

Factors

NSW experienced 12 high-price intervals above $1,000/MWh as heat-driven demand coincided with four of twelve coal units offline. Transmission constraints in south-central NSW amplified pricing pressures, with maximum demand exceeding 13GW on December 18 and 19.

New South Wales: Daily Average RRP (December 2025)

Source: AEMO (via WEB_AVERAGE_PRICE_DAY_202512)

Queensland
$54.38/MWh
Monthly Average
-13.8% from Nov 2025 ($63.05)
0
High-Price Intervals
Above $1,000/MWh
2,461
Zero/Neg Intervals
Strong solar generation

Market Rates

Spot pricing averaged $54.38/MWh in December, a 13.8% decrease from November’s $63.05/MWh. Queensland maintained the most stable pricing pattern across the mainland NEM for the month.

Factors

Queensland recorded zero high-price events above $1,000/MWh despite notable coal generation outages throughout the month. Strong solar output created consistent supply patterns, with 2,461 intervals at or below zero pricing across December.

Queensland: Daily Average RRP (December 2025)

Source: AEMO (via WEB_AVERAGE_PRICE_DAY_202512)

South Australia
$27.92/MWh
Monthly Average
-14.0% from Nov 2025 ($32.48)
5
High-Price Intervals
Above $1,000/MWh
4,375
Zero/Neg Intervals
Highest mainland count

Market Rates

Average pricing reached $27.92/MWh in December, a 14.0% decrease from November’s $32.48/MWh. Brief volatility events created a wide price range across the month despite the low overall average.

Factors

SA recorded five high-price intervals peaking at $20,299.99/MWh during wind lulls, alongside 4,375 intervals at or below zero pricing (highest mainland count). The $20,299.99/MWh figure is AEMO’s administered price cap, a ceiling applied automatically when cumulative spot prices hit a regulatory threshold (it is not a data error). Operational demand reached -311MW on December 26, requiring AEMO MSL2 intervention.

South Australia: Daily Average RRP (December 2025)

Source: AEMO (via WEB_AVERAGE_PRICE_DAY_202512)

Victoria
$27.51/MWh
Monthly Average
-13.8% from Nov 2025 ($31.92)
0
High-Price Intervals
Above $1,000/MWh
3,654
Zero/Neg Intervals
Strong wind and solar output

Market Rates

Spot pricing averaged $27.51/MWh in December, a 13.8% decrease from November’s $31.92/MWh and the lowest mainland outcome for the month.

Factors

Victoria experienced zero high-price intervals above $1,000/MWh and recorded 3,654 intervals at or below zero pricing. Wind generation performed strongly and coal plant availability improved. Christmas Day minimum demand of 1,289MW triggered MSL1 conditions, reflecting the state’s growing renewable surplus during low-demand holiday periods.

Victoria: Daily Average RRP (December 2025)

Source: AEMO (via WEB_AVERAGE_PRICE_DAY_202512)

AEMO Fuel Mix: Last 90 Days

1%
Battery
0%
Biomass
42%
Black Coal
14%
Brown Coal
3%
Gas
6%
Hydro
0%
Liquid Fuel
13%
Solar
19%
Wind
Generation Mix: 90-Day Period to December 2025

Source: Shell Energy Market Summary Report, December 2025 (AEMO fuel mix data)

Coal-fired generation held 56% of NEM output over the 90-day period to December, split between black coal (42%) and brown coal (14%). Wind (19%) and solar (13%) combined for 32%, with hydro contributing 6% and gas 3%. The 32% renewable share created extended periods of oversupply during daylight hours, directly driving December’s high zero-pricing interval counts across all mainland states.

Watt’s News

New Year, New Team: Watt Utilities Expands for 2026

After a short Christmas break, the Watt Utilities team returned ready for what shapes up to be a strong year ahead. December marked the start of a planned expansion phase, as the business prepares to meet growing demand for commercial energy management services across our SME, C&I and Strata client base.

New energy managers and analysts are joining the team to strengthen client service depth. Our Watts Mine platform, which has incorporated AI-driven analysis for over two years, continues to be enhanced with expanded contract analysis and portfolio management capabilities, delivering faster turnaround times and more detailed market intelligence for clients.

The expansion positions Watt Utilities to provide expert guidance as market complexity grows, with businesses facing both seasonal demand challenges and new minimum load risks from renewable oversupply entering the picture.

Industry News

AEMO Releases Draft 2026 Integrated System Plan

The Australian Energy Market Operator released its Draft 2026 Integrated System Plan in December 2025, providing a comprehensive roadmap for generation, storage and transmission infrastructure in the NEM through to 2050. Total generation and storage capacity would need to grow from the current 92GW to 297GW by mid-century. Grid-scale solar and wind capacity is projected to rise from 23GW to 58GW by 2030, then double to 120GW by 2050.
Source: AEMO, December 2025

Ready to review your energy contract position?

Our team works with SME, C&I and Strata clients across Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria. Get in touch for a no-obligation portfolio review.

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