Energy blame continues as ministers meet

State and territory energy ministers are gathering in Melbourne to discuss the nation's energy needs following last week's massive South Australian blackout.

Minister for Resources Josh Frydenberg

Minister for Resources Josh Frydenberg Source: AAP

The blame game over "keeping the lights on" continues as energy ministers gather for an emergency meeting sparked by South Australia's massive blackout.

Before Friday's COAG energy council meeting in Melbourne, Federal Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg has blamed "totally unrealistic" renewable energy targets in Labor states for instability in the electricity grid.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull believes those same states have an obsession with high targets for political purposes.

"They've set these heroic renewable energy targets," Mr Turnbull told 5AA radio on Friday.

"And rather than planning for energy security they just treat it as an assumption."

But SA Energy Minister Tom Koutsantonis says the renewable energy debate started by the federal government has nothing to do with facts.

The state government maintains the blanket blackout was caused by the last week's storms and not SA's reliance on wind and solar energy for 40 per cent of its power.

Mr Koutsantonis says an outdated national energy market is preventing the transition to clean energy.

Queensland Energy Minister Mark Bailey believes the states are picking up the slack by setting high targets, accusing the federal government of not doing enough under its international climate change obligations.

The state is aiming for 50 per cent renewable energy by 2030, up from the present seven per cent.

"The states are doing the heavy lifting on climate change and they're criticising us for it," he told ABC radio on Friday.

Mr Bailey accused Mr Turnbull of childish scaremongering by questioning his state's target, while calling on the federal government to outline its plans for renewable energy from 2020 and 2030.

"Their policy at the moment is to do nothing and in that vacuum it's the states that are moving in," he said.

The federal government wants the states to agree to a uniform national renewable energy target, believing individual goals are distorting the national energy market.

"They are essentially political statements that have been made by Labor governments without any regard to either energy security or energy affordability," Mr Turnbull said.

A formal review of the national energy market and better interconnection between state electricity grids will also be on Friday's agenda.

Mr Frydenberg admitted the federal renewable energy target of about 23 per cent by 2020 had helped SA reach its high level of clean energy but said it was up to that government to ensure blackouts did not occur.

"My state government should ensure that the lights stay on," he said.

Both Mr Frydenberg and Mr Turnbull admit the blackout was the result of the weather.

But federal Labor frontbencher Anthony Albanese said the Turnbull government should apologise for playing politics with the once-in-50 years SA storms.

"Energy security should not be linked to this event," he told the Nine Network.


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Source: AAP



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