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UK energy bills to fall again

Aug 25, 2023

| Agence France-Presse | The New Age

Bills will decline from October thanks to a further fall in wholesale energy prices, which had soared in the wake of the post-Covid recovery and the war in Ukraine. The cap will fall to £1,923 ($2,419, 2,240 euros) per year from £2,074 for an average household consuming electricity and gas, Ofgem said. At the height of last winter, it had reached £4,279.


‘The change will bring the average dual-fuel energy bill below £2,000 a year for the first time since April 2022, saving households an average of £151 on the previous quarter,’ Ofgem said in a statement. Energy Minister Grant Shapps said it was ‘encouraging’ that energy bills were coming down, calling it ‘another milestone as we deliver on our promise to halve inflation’.


Inflation in the UK eased sharply in July to 6.8 per cent year-on-year from 7.9 per cent in June, mainly thanks to lower energy prices, but it remains the highest in the G7. While prices are falling overall, several massive government programmes subsidising households faced with sky-high energy prices have since come to an end.


A third of households, mainly those using less energy, could actually pay more this winter, warned the Resolution Foundation think tank on Thursday. British households ‘are sick to death of yo-yoing gas prices that still remain stubbornly high,’ the NGO Greenpeace said in a statement, criticising London’s recent decision to grant new oil and gas licences in the North Sea.


News Link: UK energy bills to fall again

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