The industry minister has suggested gas companies are more interested in record war-time profits than giving hurting Australians a break.
Santos CEO Kevin Gallagher had whacked the government after it passed sweeping measures to address the energy crisis, saying the "Soviet-style policy" was a form of nationalisation.
The new laws cap gas at $12 a gigajoule, introduce a mandatory code of conduct for the gas market, and roll out power bill support for welfare recipients.
But Ed Husic ripped into "lippy" power company bosses making extraordinary claims about the relief package.
"Some of those executives might want to hold on to every single dollar of their Putin profits, but we are making what's right in the national economic interest," the minister said.
Energy Minister Chris Bowen laughed off Santos' claims as a "shrill response" and demanded gas giants charge households and businesses a fair price.
"Our job is to step in and respond on behalf all Australians, it's Australian gas under Australian soil and Australia's seas," he said.
Mr Gallagher was scathing in his assessment of the policy, despite modelling showing people will pay about $230 less than they would have for power next year.
"This will result in companies needing fiscal stability agreements with the government before new gas supply projects can take investment decisions in order to secure capital, just as would be the case if they were operating in Argentina, Venezuela or Nigeria," he told the Australian Financial Review.
Independent senator David Pocock suggested the government should do even more to get resource giants to put their hand in their pockets, renewing calls for a windfall profits tax.
"When things happen that are outside all of our control and resources receive such records profits, Australians should get some of that benefit," he told ABC Radio.
"These are Australia's resources, we should benefit from it and we should be able to use that money to set us up for the future."
But Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said they wouldn't follow the path of the UK Conservative government, which has implented a 35 per cent energy profits levy.
"We have chosen a modest intervention to make sure Australian manufacturers aren't driven out of business as a direct result of these high global prices ... with no increase whatsoever in Australian production costs," he said.
The power price relief won't be felt until midway through next year because the new laws are not expected to impact the market price of gas and coal for months.
Shadow treasurer Angus Taylor said the government's plan was "diabolical" and would not help families with high energy bills.
"Experts are loudly warning that gas price-fixing will result in 19 years of gas supply being commercially stranded and will increase the risk of blackouts in 2023," he said.
Australian Energy Regulator chair Clare Savage said energy contracts for next financial year were already heading in the right direction.