Robin Pagnamenta and Siobhan Kennedy
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Consumers could be hit by energy price rises of up to 40 per cent this year as
power companies struggle to maintain profitability in the face of a trebling
in wholesale gas prices.
Leading market analysts said yesterday that an increase of that magnitude
would drive average UK energy bills from £1,048 at present to £1,467 within
seven months.
John Hall, an adviser on energy issues to industrial and corporate clients
representing 15 per cent of the UK commercial gas and electricity market,
said that Britain’s six major energy suppliers would need to raise prices by
between 30 and 40 per cent this year to maintain margins.
Wholesale gas prices, which are linked to global oil prices, have increased
nearly threefold in a year from 36.35p per therm in June last year to 94.54p
yesterday. They briefly touched record highs of about 105p per therm earlier
this month. Crude oil prices have also touched a record of nearly $140 a
barrel this week.
Mr Hall said: “Unless there is a dramatic fall in oil prices, that is the
scale of increase we are talking about to ensure that energy companies keep
their margins.”
Britain’s power companies are gearing up for a fresh round of price rises,
the first of which could come as early as next month. Mr Hall predicted that
a staggered increase, with one in the summer and another in late autumn or
early winter, assuming wholesale prices remain at current levels, is
likelier than a single increase, which would trigger a huge public outcry.
Peter Atherton, utilities analyst for Citigroup, agreed that power companies
will need to consider price rises of 30 per cent-plus this year if they
expect to maintain reasonable profit margins from retail distribution.
However, he expected that the public outcry that would result from such big
rises would lead companies to accept very low profits from their supply
businesses this year and to balance that against higher earnings from power
generation.
The warnings came yesterday as MPs accused Ofgem, the energy regulator, of
being a toothless tiger that did not do enough to help consumers in the face
of soaring energy prices.
At a Commons committee hearing, Lindsay Hoyle, Labour MP for Chorley, made a
stinging attack on Alistair Buchanan, Ofgem’s chief executive. Mr Hoyle said
that energy companies blamed poor planning laws for not building enough
storage facilities to enable Britain to be self-sufficient but he said that
it was in the companies’ interests not to tackle the problem since they
stood to benefit from passing on the higher prices to consumers.
Mr Hoyle asked Mr Buchanan whether he was prepared to act now to address the
issue, adding: “Or are you the toothless tiger that we imagined?”
Citigroup’s analyst thought the likeliest pricing scenario is a rise in
retail prices of up to 25 per cent, which would lead to extremely thin or
zero profits from retail power supply.
However, not all energy companies are in a position to do that easily. Some
companies, such as E.ON, have substantial generation capacity. Others, such
as Centrica, the owner of British Gas, are particularly exposed to wholesale
price rises because they lack their own generation capacity.
Patrick Herren, an independent energy market analyst, said about half the
cost of a household’s gas bill and one third of the cost of an electricity
bill was the commodity cost of the gas itself, with the rest being made up
of transport and distribution costs.
Moreover, National Grid expects gas output from the North Sea to fall 11 per
cent this winter, significantly more than expected. More gas will need to be
shipped to the UK from overseas as liquefied natural gas. That will put the
UK in direct competition with Japan and South Korea, which are entirely
dependent on LNG imports and pay top global prices.
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