Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:24): I'll ask the minister to supplement this question because I shouldn't get all of this. We should spread the opportunity. The truth is that they knew before the election that power prices were going up, but they chose to keep Australians in the dark. They were a light-on government that did nothing to keep the lights on. That's what those opposite were. They had 22 different energy policies and didn't land one of them—not one. We have one policy. We announced it in December last year. We will implement that policy. We will deliver more renewables into the system, which is the cheapest form of new energy, unlike those opposite, who actually had a billion dollar fund that they announced. They announced project after project. Three years ago Alinta Energy in Gippsland— The SPEAKER: Order! The member for Fairfax is seeking the call on a point of order. Mr Ted O'Brien: The point of order is on relevance. My question was very clear. It asked the Prime Minister why the website of the Labor Party continues to promote a promise that he has since abandoned, or is he now telling us that he will commit to the— The SPEAKER: Order! I'll ask the Prime Minister to be relevant to the question. He is talking about the policy and comparing—regarding ALP policy. Mr ALBANESE: That's right. Three years ago they announced 3,800 megawatts of new generation in East Gippsland; Reeves Plains; Gatton, Queensland; Dandenong, Victoria; Port Kembla, New South Wales; Lincoln Gap, South Australia; Baroota, South Australia; Armidale, New South Wales; Crows Nest, Queensland; Tasmania; Eyre Peninsula; and Lake Macquarie. Three years later there's not one dollar and not enough energy to light up a lightbulb. I'll ask the Minister. Mr Bowen: Thanks to the Prime Minister. We are going about implementing our election commitments, because we know, on this side of the House, that clean energy is cheap energy. We have already started implementing our policies to move renewables to 82 per cent of our grid. It is the case that the former minister for energy didn't just not issue a release, he actually had to physically intervene to change the law. He sat in his office and signed an instrument to change the locks. He probably sat in his office and then once he'd done it he thought to himself: 'Fantastic. Well done, Angus.' That's what he thought. We've got the former minister for energy who sat on energy price rises. We've got the former Minister for Environment who sat on the State of the environment report. The entire leadership group of the opposition is a walking witness protection program. I'm surprised they don't have their meetings in a safe house. The SPEAKER: Before I call the next member, I just remind the minister that members should be referred to by their correct title.