Bosses of the UK’s largest energy firms have called on the government to intervene with “unprecedented” measures to prevent a fuel poverty crisis next winter.
The chief executives told MPs investigating energy prices that while pre-payment customers were already reeling from the effects of rising bills, they expected the numbers in financial distress to only increase as the months go on ahead of another expected leap in the energy price cap from October.
The cap rose by a record £693 per year on average in April – with pre-payment customers, who tend to be among the most vulnerable, facing an even larger increase.
The Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) committee heard Scottish Power chief executive Keith Anderson call for the cap system – blamed for the failure of dozens of competitors as they were unable to pass on huge rises in raw energy costs – to be scrapped in favour of a social tariff that would see the better off pay more.
He also suggested that, in the interim, a deficit fund should be established to allow people 10 years to pay off £1,000 on their bills.
Chris O’Shea, the boss of British Gas-owner Centrica, said that the UK’s largest supplier had seen a rise of 125,000 in debt over the past 12 months.
It meant, he said, that 715,000 people owed money to British Gas already and warned the number would continue to climb.
He, like Mr Anderson, said he feared a particular impact when energy use builds in the autumn ahead of the next adjustment to the cap due to take effect in October.
Research from industry specialist Cornwall Insight has predicted another hike of almost £500 to the average annual bill at that time reflecting, for the first time, heightened wholesale energy costs since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Such an increase would leave the average annual bill beyond £2,450.