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British Gas provokes fury with biggest ever price rise
The years of cheap gas prices are over as consumer groups call for urgent Government action on essential energy providers who are responsible for throttling the life out of the British economy....
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 plc, 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.
The operating profits are 19 per cent below last year after the group felt the impact of rising wholesale costs at British Gas, where profits fell 69 per cent to £166 million.
The group said the price increases were necessary to restore "reasonable profitability" to British Gas and invest in additional gas and power assets.
It means dual fuel customers – those that take both gas and electricity from the company – will see their bills increase by 25 per cent to £1,317, a £404 increase compared with the start of the year.
The price increases come just six months after the company increased its dual fuel bills by 16 per cent.
While it was widely expected that British Gas would put up its bills this summer, campaigners reacted with horror at the scale of the increase and warned that millions of consumers, including middle-class families, would struggle to afford the increase.
Lindsay Hoyle, Labour MP for Chorley and a member of the Commons Business and Enterprise Committee said: 'These rises are indecent. If anything underlines the urgent need for a windfall tax on greedy energy companies, it’s rises like these.”Tony Woodley, joint leader of the Unite union said: 'These latest vast profits now put the case for a windfall tax on big oil companies beyond argument.
The country’s four other main power suppliers –Scottish Power, E.ON, npower and Scottish and Southern Energy– are expected to announce their own increases within days. Centrica, the owner of British Gas, said that it had taken the step because it was being forced to pay an extra £2 billion this year to meet the soaring wholesale cost of gas, which it said had risen 89 per cent over the past year.
British Gas can expect to pay less for its fuel in the short term, however, because the price of gas for delivery the following day has plummeted. It decreased by almost 50 per cent on Tuesday on the back of falling oil prices and weakening demand.
The firm’s announcement, which follows a similar rise by EDF last Friday, will add to the economic misery for millions of people struggling with spiralling bills for mortgages, food, council tax and insurance.
Citigroup analyst Peter Atherton said: "We expect all the UK retail energy suppliers... to announce retail tariff increases of around 25% before the end of September."MPs on the Business and Enterprise Committee have urged the Government to have a "fundamental rethink" to help more people out of fuel poverty.
And other rivals among the UK's "big six" are sure to follow EDF and Centrica after Scottish & Southern Energy last week said it was becoming "more difficult by the day" to resist hitting customers with higher bills.
Around 10 million customers face increases of up to 44 per cent, with households in London, the Midlands and southern England hit by the biggest hikes due to regional price differences.
Patrick South, Age Concern Head of Public Affairs, said: "Energy companies say they can't absorb wholesale price rises, but in light of their profits this will sound hollow to the one in three pensioners likely to be in fuel poverty this winter."
Despite the drop in earnings, Centrica said it would raise its dividend to 3.9 pence a share from 3.35p.
A committee of MPs recently warned that higher gas and electricity bills would have serious consequences for millions of households.
Energywatch campaigns director Adam Scorer said households would be "staggered" at Centrica's profits, adding: "Customers will be outraged to learn that while they ponder how to make ends meet Centrica's shareholders are enjoying an increase in their dividends."
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July 31, 2008 at 06:30 am by liamssoft, 445 views, 11 comments
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Comments (11)
at 08:47 on July 31st, 2008
These energy price rises are a real concern to people like my 86 year old mother who have to live on a small pension.
at 09:38 on July 31st, 2008
Many thanks Vinny, yes the energy industry is making a killing out of the public's misery. I wonder if anyone on lower incomes will be able to afford to use their gas from now on. How many more people will die this winter due to the cold. I expect the Government fuel hand outs will help some of those on some form of benefit, but what about the millions without this help. The energy industry will not be forgotten for these appalling price increases and an alternative to oil and gas must be found a.s.a.p.
at 09:17 on July 31st, 2008
liamssoft, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 09:34 on July 31st, 2008
Many thanks for the GS Patchen
- reply
Frank Fortune (not verified)at 09:38 on July 31st, 2008
It's what happens when you elect a socialist government that spends 11 years of boom fiddling around with Marxist social agendas (kicking white men out of jobs, getting rid of border controls etc.) and not spending the time doing practical things like thinking about the country's energy needs. Maybe people will reflect on what is really important when they freeze their butts off in those damp little hovels they live in.
at 10:08 on July 31st, 2008
Many thanks Frank. I cant agree with the racial aspects but the Government will be blamed for the lack of foresight. You would think that during those years of plenty they would have invested for the future in energy systems and new technology instead of wasting billions on projects and consultants which were never needed in the first place. So after all these years what has Britain got to show for it? A plunging property market and double digit food and fuel inflation.
at 12:25 on July 31st, 2008
liamssoft, I like this story. It's good stuff.
That is a huge increase. If I still lived in London, there's no way I would have been able to afford it!
at 12:56 on July 31st, 2008
Many thanks amyjudd, lets hope we have some warm winters.
at 13:21 on July 31st, 2008
liamssoft, great roundup. I feel for you guys...bundle up!
at 13:35 on July 31st, 2008
Many thanks Jarrett, people are getting really fed up with the greedy energy industry. Government now wants to build more storage capacity but again its too little too late.
at 17:13 on July 31st, 2008
The price of energy in the UK is high and a high percentage of that price is tax .
megapixel13 has contributed a photo to this story.