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Sixteen million customers of British Gas will pay about a third more for gas and electricity from next month, with average bills rising to £1,300 a year.
The other five major energy companies - E.ON, EDF, Scottish and Southern Energy, ScottishPower and npower - are expected to announce similar increases. Centrica, which owns British Gas, issued a fresh warning that domestic gas bills will rise from about £600 now to more than £1,000 per year if oil prices remain high.
A report published by the company today says that oil prices, currently more
than $140 per barrel, are forcing a tectonic shift in Britain’s wholesale
energy markets. Commercial gas contracts are indexed to the price of oil.
Jake Ulrich, the managing director of Centrica Energy, said that people would
have to change their habits. He told Channel 4 News: “I think people will
use less energy and I hate to go back to the Jimmy Carter days in the US but
maybe it’s two jumpers instead of one.”
Meanwhile, the Government gave warning that households could expect to spend
10 per cent of their average weekly income on food this year.
Rising global food prices - plus the impact of higher oil, gas and
electricity costs on farming, food processing, refrigeration, food transport
and retailers - will push up the proportion of household income spent on
food by 1 per cent within a year. The poorest families, who already spend a
greater proportion of their income on food, will be hit hardest.
Fuel poverty campaigners were outraged at the prospect of another round of
energy price rises. About 4.5 million households are currently living in
fuel poverty, defined as having to spend more than 10 per cent of household
income on energy.
Maria Wardrobe, of National Energy Action, said that the social impact of the
projected gas increases was unthinkable. She said that it would tip a
further 1.6 million households into fuel poverty, leaving government plans
to eradicate the problem for the vulnerable by 2010 in tatters.
Centrica, the UK’s largest domestic energy supplier, blames the runaway
prices on the dwindling supply of gas from the North Sea, which is forcing
suppliers to import more.
About 40 per cent of the gas consumed in the UK this year will be imported,
either by pipeline from the Netherlands and Norway or by ship as liquefied
natural gas from countries such as Algeria, Qatar and Malaysia. Last year,
27 per cent of Britain’s gas was imported. That proportion is predicted to
rise to 75 per cent by 2015.
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Now watch: a small increase in buying as people stock up against the financial hardship promised, and then the biggest fall in sales ever.
C Smith, Norwich, UK
as usual big business making money from all and making sure there profits are high, this is an industry that should be nationalised as should be electric so that the poor dont become poorer.
jonathan rose, Gt Torrington, uk
If the cost of gas is dependent on that of oil for physical reasons, then so be it. If however, the cost is linked because of some contractual mechanism, then surely it is not beyond the wit of man to fix this. Fiscal rape is not to be envied.
Mike, Newbury,
This is a cynical move to prop up profits and shareholder value.
As mentioned (once!) the price of gas contracts has been historically linked to the price of oil. That linkage is no longer appropriate and should be removed, at which point, we should expect prices to come down.
Pigs and flying!!!
Lou, London, UK
Just how much of a loss are the energy suppliers making?
Eric Brown, Newport, Wales