Energy bills to fall for millions of Britons from April
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[February 07, 2020] By
Susanna Twidale and Muvija M
LONDON (Reuters) - Energy bills are set to
fall for around 15 million households in Britain after energy regulator
Ofgem told suppliers to cut average standard bills and pre-pay bills by
1.4% from April 1.
A cap on electricity and gas bills came into effect in January 2019 and
was a flagship policy of former British Prime Minister Theresa May to
end what she called "rip-off" prices.
The regulator, Ofgem, said the price cap for average annual consumption
for standard bills will fall by 17 pounds ($22) to 1,162 pounds a year
from April 1 for around 11 million homes.
Some 4 million households on pre-pay energy meters will also see average
bills fall by 17 pounds to 1,200 pounds a year, it said.
Ofgem, which calculates the cap using a formula including wholesale
energy prices, network expenses and costs of government policies, such
as renewable subsidies, said the reduction was due to a fall in energy
prices over August 2019 to January 2020.
(GRAPHIC: What costs make up a British duel fuel energy bill? -
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"A strong supply of gas, such as record amounts of liquefied natural gas
and healthy gas stock inventories, has been the main factor pushing down
wholesale prices," Ofgem said.
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The sun rises behind electricity pylons near Chester, northern
England October 24, 2011. REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo
The price cap is intended to be a temporary measure and Ofgem said it
would carry out a review for the government on whether market conditions
meant it should be lifted or extended past 2020.
Ofgem estimates the cap saved households around 1 billion pounds in
2019.
But it said switching suppliers is still likely to save people more
money.
"Households can reduce their energy bills further by shopping around for
a better deal," said Jonathan Brearley, chief executive at Ofgem.
Britain's energy market is dominated by six big suppliers - Centrica's <CNA.L>
British Gas, new entrant Ovo Energy that took over SSE's <SSE.L> retail
arm, Iberdrola's <IBE.MC> Scottish Power, Innogy's npower, E.ON <EONGn.DE>
and EDF Energy <EDF.PA.
(Reporting by Susanna Twidale in London and Muvija M in Bengaluru;
Editing by Bernard Orr and Barbara Lewis)
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