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Thursday, September 4, 2008

Pre-payment Meters a Good Deal???

BBC Business News - Energy companies 'exploit poor'

Energy companies have been accused by an industry watchdog of exploiting some of the poorest people in society. Customers with pre-payment meters are paying hundreds of pounds more for electricity and gas than those with access to the cheapest tariffs.

According to Energywatch, some people cannot take advantage of lower tariffs because they do not have bank accounts.

Customers on the meters are charged an average of £195 more a year than those paying by direct debit, it says. In some cases, customers using meters have been found to pay as much as £304 more a year.

The cheapest tariffs are typically available to those who apply online and pay by direct debit.
'Morally bankrupt'

Many consumers prefer to use pre-payment meters to pay for gas and electricity.
It allows them to budget and to pay as they go along rather than face an unwelcome bill. But others have no option.

"That they should ramp up the rates and exploit those with no access to alternative payment methods is morally bankrupt," said Energywatch chief executive of Allan Asher.

The industry regulator Ofgem says companies install pre-payment meters when a customer has difficulty managing their energy bills. They are common in rented accommodation and holiday homes. There are 3.5 million electricity and 2.2 million gas pre-payment meters in Britain.

More meters

Energywatch claims that the number of meters being installed each year has been rising due to soaring energy bills.

Some 580,000 pre-payment meters were installed in 2006. Energywatch claims that 63% were installed by companies to recover debts, which would limit the ability of those households to switch to cheaper suppliers or payment methods. The industry also argues that pre-payment tariffs tend to be higher because of the expense of maintaining the meters and the payment system.

Ofgem calculates that the additional cost of providing gas or electricity by pre-payment is £85 per household.

But according to Energywatch, even after these costs are taken into account, the industry is making close to £300m a year in revenues from customers on pre-payment meters.

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Monday, August 11, 2008

Inflation-busting water bill rise

Households have learned of proposed above-inflation water bill hikes after firms submitted their draft business plans to regulator Ofwat.

The UK's largest water and wastewater services company, Thames Water, announced it expects to raise bills by around 3%, excluding annual inflation, each year between 2010 and 2015.

United Utilities, which manages water and wastewater distribution in the North West of England, said customers were set to see their average bills increase slightly more than 2% a year during the five-year period, with inflation also stripped out.

Severn Trent, which has more than eight million customers, said its bills would rise "only slightly above inflation".

The Consumer Council for Water warned that Thames Water had proposed an average bill increase of 16% above the rate of inflation by 2015.

David Bland, chairman of the Consumer Council for Water, London and South East, said: "The proposal of high price increases and more water meters, combined with the rising cost of energy bills, could hurt many households. London has some of the country's poorest areas, and the Government needs to seriously consider ways to help those who cannot afford to pay for their water."

All of the UK's water companies are required to submit their draft investment plans for Ofwat's scrutiny, including how much they expect customers to pay.

Thames Water and United Utilities revealed the bill increases as they outlined aims for multi-billion pound investments in water and sewerage services as well as cost-cutting schemes to drive efficiency.

Yorkshire Water said it would deliver a £1.9 billion investment in return for customers paying less than £2 more a year over the next five years.

But households in Wales are set to avoid above-inflation rises after Welsh Water said its customers would not see annual tariffs increase in "real" terms, when inflation is stripped out.


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Saturday, August 2, 2008

Will gas prices mean a rate increase?

BRITISH Gas owner Centrica said yesterday it would raise gas prices by a record 35 per cent and electricity prices by 9 per cent as it passes on rising energy costs to householders.

The country’s largest energy supplier, with 16m customers, said the move would take place immediately – after revealing its half-year operating profits from its residential gas business plunged 69 per cent to £166m from a year ago.

Centrica’s price hike comes just a few days after rival EDF Energy put up gas prices by 22 per cent and electricity prices by 17 per cent, with other power firms expected to follow suit.

British Gas managing director Phil Bentley said: “We very much regret that we have had to make this decision at a time when many household budgets are already under pressure.”

Soaring energy prices have cost British Gas an extra £2bn over the last year, leading it to pass on costs to consumers. Analysts said these hikes may further stoke inflation, increasing the pressure on the Bank of England to hike interest rates at a time when it is also trying to head off recessionary pressures.

Capital Economics economist Paul Dales said if other energy suppliers mirror these increases the consumer price index would rise by 0.6 per cent, pushing it from 3.8 per cent to 4.4 per cent in August. Dales said: “The news that British Gas became the second utility supplier to raise its price means that inflation is likely to rise further and faster then we previously expected.”

This could spell further bad news for homeowners and investors looking to renew their mortgages.


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Thursday, July 31, 2008

UK gas prices to soar 35pc

British Gas owner Centrica says it will raise gas and electricity prices for UK households by 35 per cent and 9 per cent respectively, citing rising wholesale gas prices.

The company, the biggest household supplier in the UK with over 16 million customers, said profits at its British Gas Residential unit had fallen 69 per cent in the first half, while wholesale prices for the coming winter are up nearly 90 per cent on the previous year.

Centrica shares rose 1.5 per cent to 314.75 pence, valuing the business at 11.7 billion pounds ($24.36 billion).

"We very much regret that we have had to make this decision at a time when many household budgets are already under pressure," British Gas managing director Phil Bentley said in a statement.

He added that the firm would be contacting all its customers to show how they can save energy to offset the price rises.

The bill hikes will come in with immediate effect.

Centrica is the second of the six major suppliers to the UK market to raise prices in less than a week, after French supplier EDF Energy hiked gas and electricity bills 22 per cent and 17 per cent respectively on Friday.

The other four are expected to follow suit sometime before the winter months.

They are RWE-owned nPower, Iberdrola-owned Scottish Power, E.ON UK, and Scottish and Southern Energy.

The trend of repeated rounds of price hikes by the main suppliers was criticised in a report by British members of Parliament on Monday, which said the market did not operate efficiently and that it was easy for companies to predict what their rivals were going to do.



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British Gas provokes fury with biggest ever price rise

35% hike comes as parent company prepares to announce £880m profit

British Gas yesterday increased the pressure on household budgets after announcing the biggest ever increase in gas prices for its 16 million customers.

The 35% rise in gas bills was blamed on higher wholesale costs but came just hours before British Gas's parent company, Centrica, was due to reveal profits of £880m for the first half of the year.

Consumer groups reacted with anger to news that will dismay every gas-using household in the country. The move is expected to send another 1 million families into fuel poverty if replicated across the industry.

EDF Energy, one of the other five major suppliers, announced a 22% rise in gas prices last week.

Adam Scorer, of the consumer group Energywatch, said he was surprised by the increase. "I'm not sure that many consumers will be able to fully take in the news that their gas bills are going up by over a third," he said.

Help the Aged said it was a "disaster" for the millions of pensioners already struggling to heat their homes.

From today, British Gas's 15.9 million customers will be paying 35% more for their gas, and 9% more for electricity.

The company said the average dual fuel customer who was paying £913 for their joint gas and electricity bills at the beginning of 2008, has seen them jump by more than £400 to £1,317 - this at a time when many households are struggling to pay increased petrol and food bills.

The company said it would protect the most vulnerable 340,000 customers, most of whom live on benefits, from the increase. The 2.1 million customers who signed up for capped products also escape the increase, for now.

British Gas managing director, Phil Bentley, defended the price hike.

"We very much regret that we have had to make this decision at a time when many household budgets are already under pressure. The simple fact though is that we have entered an era of unprecedented high world energy prices. The only answer to cope with higher energy prices, I'm afraid, is for all of us to be more energy efficient."

Bentley said profits for the retail arm of the energy giant Centrica were down by 69% to £166m for the first half of this year. However, industry analysts noted these figures were in comparison to the bumper £577m profit the company announced for the same period last year.

Scorer warned that customers may be looking with considerable interest at the Centrica profit statement today.

"It is now an absolute imperative that government directs the European competition authorities to explore every avenue that might return some sanity to the gas price," he said.

Following EDF's price rise on Friday, the remaining four big energy suppliers are expected to follow in the coming weeks. All have claimed that the price of wholesale gas for delivery this winter has jumped 89%.

In recent months energy prices have become a huge political issue. The government has been forced to rip up its targets on fuel poverty after admitting they are no longer achievable. Earlier this year Gordon Brown travelled to Saudi Arabia in an effort to get production increased, and to ease petrol prices that have also risen by a third.

The Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, said the British Gas hike would be "devastating" for many families, particularly the elderly and vulnerable.

"The announcement may have been made in a hot spell in July, but when winter comes round thousands will be forced to choose between heating their homes and cooking their meals.

"Energy companies are benefiting from a £9bn windfall yet continue to hike up their prices on the government's watch. This is unacceptable."

The shadow energy minister, Charles Hendry, said: "The government has not done enough to improve energy efficiency in the home, they have not built sufficient gas storage and they haven't succeeded in negotiating an open market across the European energy sector.

"As a result of this, people are in for a desperate time this winter, as millions of families will face real hardship and an extra million more people are likely to join the 4.5 million already in fuel poverty."



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British Gas announces huge price rise for households

Some 16 million customers of British Gas face huge increases in their bills after the country's biggest home energy provider announced price rises of up to 35 per cent yesterday.

From today, British Gas is raising the price of its gas by 35 per cent, while customers buying electricity from it will pay 9.4 per cent more. Households who buy both services from the utility will see their dual fuel bills rise by 25 per cent.

The increases mean the average household's dual fuel bill will rise from £1,055 a year to £1,322.

Energy analysts pointed out that before the 15 per cent increase in costs implemented by British Gas in January, the typical household was paying £912 a year. Yesterday's price rise means British Gas's bills have now risen by 45 per cent so far this year.

However, the energy group said it had no option but to raise its prices following an increase in the cost of gas on the wholesale markets of almost 90 per cent since last winter.

"We very much regret that we have had to make this decision at a time when many household budgets are already under pressure," said Phil Bentley, the company's managing director. "The simple fact is, though, that we have entered an era of unprecedented high world energy prices."

Centrica, British Gas's parent company, owns substantial gas reserves, but only supplies a quarter of its retail arm's needs and is, in any case, prevented by regulators from subsidising the unit's prices. The company is due to unveil its interim results in full today, but revealed last night that profits at British Gas fell to £166m during the first six months of the year, 69 per cent down on last year's figure.

Mr Bentley said that without today's price increases, British Gas would lose several hundred million pounds in the second half of the year.

The company is desperate to refute accusations that it is profiteering, particularly in the face of growing calls for a windfall tax on the energy industry, and yesterday reiterated its promise to spend £43m over the next 12 months on "fuel poor" customers struggling to pay their bills.

British Gas also promised it would make no further increases this year to the bills of customers on its standard tariffs.

But analysts said the company might have to make further price increases early in 2009 and warned that its main rivals were certain to announce similar price increases for their own customers.

Aside from British Gas, of the next five biggest home energy suppliers in the UK, only EDF has so far raised its prices this summer, announcing increases of up to 22 per cent last week. Scottish & Southern has already warned that higher bills are imminent, while ScottishPower, E.On and npower are expected to fall into line within weeks.

"The difference between the main suppliers on price has been and will remain very small," said Joe Malinowski, the chief executive of The Energy Shop. "There is no question that the other providers will follow these moves."

Mr Malinowski expects most providers, including British Gas, to raise their prices again in January or February of next year unless there is a substantial fall in the cost of wholesale gas in the meantime.

The soaring cost of fuel bills has prompted calls for the Government to review regulation of the energy industry, the structure of which was heavily criticised by MPs sitting on the Business and Enterprise Select Committee this week. Ministers are also under pressure to do more to help low-income households caught out by the price rises.

However, energy companies insist that Britons pay lower home energy bills than consumers in most other countries in Europe. The most recent figures from the Department of Business and Enterprise show that, at the end of 2007, UK domestic gas prices were the fourth lowest in the European Union and electricity prices were the eighth lowest. While prices have risen since the end of last year, there have also been increases on the Continent.

Nevertheless, Brendan Barber, the general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, called for a rethink of the Government's energy policy. "The UK's coal reserves must be allowed to play a bigger part in our energy mix," he said. "Coal would give UK consumers and industry more stable and secure energy prices, rather than the volatility we are now witnessing."

Gordon Lishman, the director-general of Age Concern, said: "It is absolutely unacceptable that around 2.25 million pensioner households are now living in fuel poverty, and thousands more will soon be facing the same fate. As an emergency measure to help alleviate the problem this winter, the Government and energy companies should be working together to offer 'fuel vouchers' to the poorest pensioners."

Economists warned that the latest round of price rises would also be a further blow to the Bank of England's attempts to bring inflation back to its 2 per cent target rate. Philip Shaw, an economist at Investec, said energy suppliers were increasing bills by more than expected, making it likely that inflation would rise even more significantly above the current level of 3.8 per cent.

"[This] increases the chances that inflation will hit 5 per cent over the autumn," Mr Shaw warned. Such a rise would prompt calls for a rise in interest rates, putting additional pressure on many households' budgets.

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Wednesday, July 30, 2008

British Gas Raises Energy Bills!


EDF have already raised prices this summer

British Gas owner Centrica has announced it is to raise gas prices by 35% and electricity prices by 9%.

The UK's biggest domestic energy supplier said that the price hikes would take place with immediate effect.

It blamed "soaring wholesale energy prices", but added that standard tariff prices would not rise again in 2008.

The move comes just a few days after rival EDF Energy put up gas prices by 22% and electricity prices by 17%, with other firms expected to follow suit.

Dual fuel

Centrica said the average dual fuel bill would go up by 25%. This is the second increase this year, after a 15% rise in bills in January.

"We very much regret that we have had to make this decision at a time when many household budgets are already under pressure," said British Gas managing director Phil Bentley.

"The simple fact though is that we have entered an era of unprecedented high world energy prices."

A report prepared for Centrica earlier this month warned that annual average gas bills could rise from £600 to more than £1,000 early in the next decade.




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