Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (14:09): The whole premise of the question is wrong. But when you look at the energy crisis— Honourable members interjecting— The SPEAKER: Order! Members on my left! Mr ALBANESE: They've given up on the IR. No more talk about small businesses and IR. No more forced examples coming through. They're now back onto another falsehood. This is what Kane Thornton, the Chief Executive of the Clean Energy Council, has had to say: … abundantly clear that Australia's clean energy transition has been throttled by years of policy uncertainty, with … the amount of quarterly commissioned capacity continuing the downward trend of the last few years and now at its lowest level on record … Industry confidence to invest is growing, aided by clearer and more potent policy directions across the country … Couldn't have said it more clearly. Philip Lowe, the Governor of the Reserve Bank had this to say: When we were on a different path, people were saying, 'Are they really serious?' It was damaging us. Richard Court, the former WA Liberal Premier: The past decade of energy policy has been a slow-moving train wreck. Ms Ley: A point of order on relevance: rattling off the wrong page of talking points is not answering the question: one company! The SPEAKER: The Deputy Leader of the Opposition knows that was not a correct way of stating a point of order. It might have been a good grab, but it was not a point of order. I warn her that that sort of behaviour will not be tolerated for much longer. The Prime Minister is referring to energy prices. I give him the call. Mr ALBANESE: I was asked about power. We know from the member for Mitchell, who's had some good comments about his mate the member for Cook, that they were addicted to power, but they weren't very good at energy. They weren't very good at energy policy. That's the problem for those opposite: all about power policy; nothing about energy policy. The truth is that the cheapest form of new energy is clean energy, renewable energy, which is why our policy will put downward pressure on energy prices. When it comes to mortgages, and I know this is a really difficult concept, if you have the policy that we have, that the WA government has—and I notice Minister Cook in the gallery today. Perhaps Minister Cook could provide a workshop while he's here in Parliament House about how successful the WA program has been in providing a shared equity system for people to get into housing in Western Australia. Our Help to Buy scheme will do just that as well, because the nature of a Help to Buy scheme is that, rather than the person who has the borrowing—it's a shared scheme. (Time expired)