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AustraliaBusiness3 days ago

NT government reveals scale of bungled smart meter rollout

The Northern Territory's main energy retailer, Jacana Energy, has disclosed that more customers than initially reported have experienced billing delays caused by problems with the rollout of smart meters. During testimony before the NT parliament, Jacana CEO Jo Conway stated that the number of affected customers increased from approximately 3,000 to around 5,000. The issue came to light when some Alice Springs residents had their power unexpectedly cut off due to delayed billing. Jacana previously claimed these issues were limited to a 'small number' of customers and had been resolved.

The Northern Territory's main energy retailer has revealed thousands more customers than previously thought have been affected by delays in billing due to the botched rollout of smart meters.

Jacana Energy chief executive Jo Conway revealed the scale of the bungle during an appearance at budget estimates in the NT parliament today.

Jacana Energy is the largest electricity retailer in the Northern Territory.  ( ABC News: William Green )

In response to a question from independent MLA Robyn Lambley about the number of Jacana customers affected by billing delays, Ms Conway said: "Initially the billing delays that were expected were around 3,000 customers, which we knew about in July, 2025.

"That's extended to around 5,000 customers."

In March, Alice Springs residents told the ABC their power had been unexpectedly switched off by Jacana after the organisation failed to send them bills for months.

At the time, Jacana said "a small number" of customers had received their bills late "due to technical issues" within the retailer's billing processes last year, but that those issues had been resolved.

Robyn Lambley led the questioning of Jacana and Power and Water executives in parliament today. ( ABC News: Michael Franchi )

Ms Conway also revealed Jacana had switched off power to 1,995 customers — 1,842 homes and 153 small businesses — during the 2025-26 financial year, and was owed more than $33 million in unpaid power bills as of April.

Jacana, which is owned by the NT government, is by far the largest energy retailer in the NT, its only competitor being the privately owned Rimfire Energy.

Smart meter data 'not transmitted'

Power and Water Corporation (PWC), also owned by the NT government, is the body responsible for maintaining energy infrastructure, distributing electricity, and providing meter reading data to energy retailers in the territory.

During estimates today, PWC representatives admitted that energy usage data from smart meters had not been regularly supplied to Jacana, affecting the retailer's ability to bill customers.

"We've had to upgrade our meters to smart meters ... and there have been some technical problems in putting that in place," PWC chair Peter Wilson said.

Government-owned Jacana is one of only two energy retailers in the NT. ( ABC News: Loretta Lohberger )

Smart meters are supposed to record energy use in five or 30-minute intervals, and automatically send that data to the energy retailer, unlike a traditional meter which requires data to be collected manually.

PWC's rollout of the technology across the NT is ongoing and is set to be completed by 2030 .

Ms Lambley questioned PWC over the case of a single mother in her Alice Springs electorate who was faced with a bill she was unable to pay late last year, after months of not being billed.

"It was only late in the day that I realised that Power and Water were actually the entity more responsible for the failure to bill than Jacana," she said.

"That's correct, isn't it?"

"If Jacana didn't have the data ... they can't bill," Mr Wilson replied.

PWC executive general manager Michael Besselink said: "We do take our share of the blame for all of this."

"[We] are working very hard ... so that these things don't continue on."

Ms Lambley asked whether there was "any effort — maybe working with Jacana — to make amends to those customers that were placed in extraordinary hardship".

PWC chief executive Djuna Pollard responded that it was "the retailer at the end of the day that issues the electricity bill".

Asked whether the issue with smart meter billing would continue given the ongoing rollout, Jacana Energy chair Trevor James said: "It shouldn't do, no."

Read the full article at ABC News (Australia)
Source document: Jacana Energy CEO Jo Conway's statement during parliamentary testimony

1 reports

ABC News (Australia)State / PublicCenter3 days ago
NT government reveals scale of bungled smart meter rollout

The Northern Territory's main energy retailer, Jacana Energy, has disclosed that more customers than initially reported have experienced billing delays caused by problems with the rollout of smart meters. During testimony before the NT parliament, Jacana CEO Jo Conway stated that the number of affected customers increased from approximately 3,000 to around 5,000. The issue came to light when some Alice Springs residents had their power unexpectedly cut off due to delayed billing. Jacana previously claimed these issues were limited to a 'small number' of customers and had been resolved.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information without overtly favoring any particular side. It reports on the statements made by Jacana Energy's CEO and mentions the concerns raised by an independent MLA, providing a balanced account of the situation without using biased language or omitting key details.

Official sources cited

  • organisation Jacana Energy CEO Jo Conway's statement during parliamentary testimony
  • organisation Independent MLA Robyn Lambley's questioning of Jacana and Power and Water executives

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • organisationJacana Energy CEO Jo Conway's statement during parliamentary testimony
  • organisationIndependent MLA Robyn Lambley's questioning of Jacana and Power and Water executives