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Fresh misery as Scottish Power to put gas prices up by 34%



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Published Date: 29 August 2008
Energy firms Npower and Scottish Power today announced more bad news for households with steep hikes in gas and electricity prices.
Npower said prices for gas customers would increase by an average 26%, with prices for electricity customers up by 14%, both with immediate effect.

ScottishPower followed a few hours later by announcing it would increase gas prices by an average 3
4% and electricity prices by 9% from Monday.

The firms have 11.8 million customers between them.

Both blamed the soaring wholesale costs, saying they had made current pricing levels unsustainable.

They are the last of the country's suppliers to hit households with increases in recent weeks, following moves by British Gas, EDF, E.On and Scottish & Southern Energy.

Npower said the average gas customer would see an average annual increase of £162 with electricity bills rising by an average £60.

The firm claimed that until today its domestic gas prices had been the same as they were 18 months ago following a price decrease in 2007 and an increase in January, but wholesale costs had doubled.

Electricity generation had also been directly affected by the soaring price of raw materials prices, which had increased by 122% for gas and coal and 79% for oil over the last 12 months.

Npower managing director Giuseppe Di Vita said: "I'm sorry we've had to increase our prices, and we've made this decision extremely reluctantly, especially as household budgets are being squeezed so much at the moment.

"There is help available for people who can't afford to pay their bills and we want our customers to get in touch if they're worried."

ScottishPower said the average dual fuel customer would see bills increasing by 25%.

About 1.2 million of the company's customers were currently protected by fixed-price tariffs, it said.

The company today offered a new tariff guaranteeing prices until December 2009.

Willie MacDiarmid, ScottishPower's director of energy retail, said: "These are difficult times and we understand the financial impact this announcement will have on our customers.

"Although we're one of the last companies to announce increases, we're sorry we couldn't hold on any longer. However, we have worked very hard to protect people for as long as possible from these considerable increases in the wholesale market.

"We have tried hard to keep electricity prices as low as possible and our increase of 9% is the lowest in the sector.

"The continuing volatility in the global market for gas is directly contributing to increasing UK's domestic energy prices and Scottish Power is not immune to these rises."




The full article contains 439 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 29 August 2008 3:45 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Xena - Warrior Princess,

29/08/2008 16:07:35
Did they wait so long to do this in the hope that people would change their supplier to them? It is getting ridiculous now the amount they are pushing up the prices. Heat and light are necessities not luxuries and the government are making no attempt to help. I still say they should all be renationalised.
2

JT,

29/08/2008 21:47:51
How can they put the prices up immediately, if they change your direct debit amounts they have to give a minimum 10 days notice, why not a minimum period before putting the pricess up rather than immediately. Like the comment before its not as if its a luxury item any of us can do without. Come on Brown start sorting this country out rather than lining your own pocket!
3

Peter Edwards,

Stoke upon Trent 29/08/2008 22:23:03
Yes!, I agree, "RE-NATIONLIZE" all the utilies, they should never have been sold in the first place. Reopen the mines and start up coal gas production, we were independent once, so what's the problem.

Comon Scotland, show the english the way back to fuel indepenance.

Well done "MAGGIE" all your own work.
4

Boswall,

30/08/2008 10:13:01
#1 #3

Exactly how would re-nationalising the energy industry affect the international spot price for gas and oil electricity?
5

celtic4,

USA 12/09/2008 20:09:23
Thank God for the USA. In the winter, the goverment helps those of low income with Winter Heat Help, and pays the largest part if not all of the bill to get them thru the bad months. Thank God. Many would die if it were not for that.

 

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