Jillian Ambrose 

Ministers urged to act as households in Great Britain face energy bill ‘anxiety’

Under government’s price cap typical gas and electricity bills are forecast to rise by £209 from this summer
  
  

Woolly clothes on a radiator
The Treasury has said it is too soon to act, with the scale of winter price increases still unclear. Photograph: Linda Nylind/The Guardian

Ministers face growing calls to cut utility bills as millions of households in Great Britain face energy cost “anxiety,” with gas and electricity costs forecast to rise to almost £1,900 from this summer.

The typical dual-fuel bill is expected to climb by nearly 13% under the government’s energy price cap, adding £209 a year to household costs, in a blow to families already hit by rising prices for essentials.

Higher energy bills are expected to weigh on households through the summer months after the Iran war caused the UK’s gas market price to double earlier this year, according to market experts at the consultancy Cornwall Insight.


They warned that the quarterly price cap is likely to remain above pre-crisis levels into early winter even if tensions ease, leaving households exposed to elevated costs as demand for heating rises in colder months.

Craig Lowrey, the principal consultant at Cornwall, said that unless the price cap drops in the autumn, the government “will need to think seriously about targeted support for the most vulnerable”.

Rachel Reeves last week announced a package of measures to cut the cost of living but has not so far offered support for domestic energy costs. She told MPs on Thursday that Treasury officials were working up contingency plans ahead of the winter; but that any support scheme for households would be “targeted and temporary”.

Instead the chancellor announced what the Treasury is calling “Great British summer savings” by reducing VAT on tickets for attractions and children’s meals. The savings will come into effect a few days before the energy price rise, to coincide with the start of the summer holiday season.

Campaigners expressed disappointment that she had not taken action on energy bills. “We had hoped that the predictions of a huge rise in the price cap could have been the moment for ministers to show they are prepared to go further and faster in their determination to bring down bills,” said Simon Francis, of Fuel Poverty Action Campaign.

He said the delay in announcing support “may cause anxiety among households who pay on direct debit and who could see energy firms increase their payments now to take into account likely higher costs this winter”.

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The Treasury has insisted that it is too soon to act, however, with the scale of winter price increases as yet unclear, and dependent on whether a peace deal between the US and Iran reopens the strait of Hormuz.

The unit price of electricity is expected to rise to 26.03p per kilowatt hour from July, while gas will rise to 7.16p/kWh, according to Cornwall Insight forecasts, meaning household bills will vary depending on how much energy is consumed.

The regulator, Ofgem, is considering whether to lower its assumptions for how much energy the average home uses, which means the new cap may appear similar to the current cap when it is announced on Thursday, even though the unit rate is likely to be much higher.

A government spokesperson said: “We know families will be concerned about the impact the conflict in the Middle East will have on their energy bills. Tackling the affordability crisis is our number one priority. The lesson of yet another fossil fuel crisis is the UK needs to get off the fossil fuel rollercoaster and on to clean, homegrown power we control.”

 

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