Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (15:31): I thought I might get another question on infrastructure. I thought I might, but not quite. Instead, I get a question from a coalition that announced 22 different energy policies and did not land a single one. Not one. Unlike us, who put out modelling by RepuTex in 2021. Not Labor Party modelling: independent modelling from Australia's leading energy economists in 2021. What we did, of course, was to continue to fulfil our commitment to the Rewiring the Nation program. It was there in the budget. The rewiring the nation program, as the minister for energy has pointed out, is based on the Australian Energy Market Operator's integrated systems plan of making sure that transmission was fit for purpose in the 21st century. We have been upfront about the challenges which are there, the challenges which have been created by two major issues. One, of course, is the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which has had an impact on global energy prices. Apparently that has skipped the attention of the coalition. The second is the fact that we inherited such a failed position of four gigawatts of energy leaving the system but only one gigawatt going back in. It wasn't just the Liberal Party who committed to a 25 per cent reduction in the wholesale electricity price by the end of 2021 during the 2019 campaign. The National Party did the same thing. The SPEAKER: The member for Fairfax, on a point of order? Mr Ted O'Brien: My question went to the broken promise of $275 and whether the Prime Minister would apologise to the Australian— The SPEAKER: It was a broad, partisan question. I am giving the call to the Prime Minister when the House comes to order. Mr ALBANESE: It said very clearly that they would have a 25 per cent reduction in the average wholesale electricity price. They went through all these things that they said would happen, like Battery of the Nation, that just didn't eventuate, and their billion-dollar fund for new energy, of which zero was delivered. Not a single watt, let alone a gigawatt, was delivered as a result of this policy. Instead of that, what they also did was to go on these exercises in, basically, nonsense—spending money, including $4 million they planned and funded to the proponents, mind you, of the Collinsville coal-fired power plant. Ms Ley interjecting— The SPEAKER: The Deputy Leader of the Opposition will cease interjecting. Mr ALBANESE: There were $4 million to the people who were building it, the private sector operators who were building it. They gave them $4 million. (Time expired)