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Quote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on August 26, 2022, 09:15:45 amQuote from: Filo on August 26, 2022, 07:25:33 amAn 80% increase announced from 1st October, all while the PM holidays and doesn’t give a f**k, and the two wannabe PM’s just say madder and madder things and also doesn’t give a f**k, and the Chancellor says we are helping by giving everyone £400 for their bills and doesn’t give a f**k!And no one available for comment this morning from the Government, surprise surprise!The chancellor has been;https://news.sky.com/story/soaring-energy-price-cap-will-cause-stress-and-anxiety-but-chancellor-nadhim-zahawi-insists-help-on-the-way-12681721There's not much point the current PM saying anything as he doesn't have the ability to make the change given he's less than 2 weeks less in the job (why has it took so long....)I have no bloody idea how they fix this, I don't think there is an easy answer. A better solution would be the big countries coming together and fixing the prices on the world markets. That's an impossible thing to do so I fear there's no way people can be protected. But the current PM had the ability to throw another £50m at Ukraine!
Quote from: Filo on August 26, 2022, 07:25:33 amAn 80% increase announced from 1st October, all while the PM holidays and doesn’t give a f**k, and the two wannabe PM’s just say madder and madder things and also doesn’t give a f**k, and the Chancellor says we are helping by giving everyone £400 for their bills and doesn’t give a f**k!And no one available for comment this morning from the Government, surprise surprise!The chancellor has been;https://news.sky.com/story/soaring-energy-price-cap-will-cause-stress-and-anxiety-but-chancellor-nadhim-zahawi-insists-help-on-the-way-12681721There's not much point the current PM saying anything as he doesn't have the ability to make the change given he's less than 2 weeks less in the job (why has it took so long....)I have no bloody idea how they fix this, I don't think there is an easy answer. A better solution would be the big countries coming together and fixing the prices on the world markets. That's an impossible thing to do so I fear there's no way people can be protected.
An 80% increase announced from 1st October, all while the PM holidays and doesn’t give a f**k, and the two wannabe PM’s just say madder and madder things and also doesn’t give a f**k, and the Chancellor says we are helping by giving everyone £400 for their bills and doesn’t give a f**k!And no one available for comment this morning from the Government, surprise surprise!
Quote from: Filo on August 26, 2022, 10:06:48 amQuote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on August 26, 2022, 09:15:45 amQuote from: Filo on August 26, 2022, 07:25:33 amAn 80% increase announced from 1st October, all while the PM holidays and doesn’t give a f**k, and the two wannabe PM’s just say madder and madder things and also doesn’t give a f**k, and the Chancellor says we are helping by giving everyone £400 for their bills and doesn’t give a f**k!And no one available for comment this morning from the Government, surprise surprise!The chancellor has been;https://news.sky.com/story/soaring-energy-price-cap-will-cause-stress-and-anxiety-but-chancellor-nadhim-zahawi-insists-help-on-the-way-12681721There's not much point the current PM saying anything as he doesn't have the ability to make the change given he's less than 2 weeks less in the job (why has it took so long....)I have no bloody idea how they fix this, I don't think there is an easy answer. A better solution would be the big countries coming together and fixing the prices on the world markets. That's an impossible thing to do so I fear there's no way people can be protected. But the current PM had the ability to throw another £50m at Ukraine!He does right now. But he can't announce we're going to do x in 6 weeks because he'll be gone by then.
Ooh, cut back on my energy usage to reduce my bill.That had absolutely not crossed my mind. The man with £20 million quid in an Offshore tax haven is a genius.
Quote from: mugnapper on August 26, 2022, 01:49:39 pmOoh, cut back on my energy usage to reduce my bill.That had absolutely not crossed my mind. The man with £20 million quid in an Offshore tax haven is a genius.They genuinely think we are all thick
Energy prices of this scale will simply crash the economy, businesses won't cope as people will have no money for discretionary spending. At least what Starmer is putting forward, a solid price cap and tax the massive, undeserved profits of the oil and gas sector might avert that.We need to put off some of the pain to get alternative energy sources up and running.It might be worth asking how is it we have become reliant on the international gas markets. Then again energy security stopped being a topic politicians mentioned long ago.
Quote from: River Don on August 26, 2022, 02:44:51 pmEnergy prices of this scale will simply crash the economy, businesses won't cope as people will have no money for discretionary spending. At least what Starmer is putting forward, a solid price cap and tax the massive, undeserved profits of the oil and gas sector might avert that.We need to put off some of the pain to get alternative energy sources up and running.It might be worth asking how is it we have become reliant on the international gas markets. Then again energy security stopped being a topic politicians mentioned long ago. You're right that there is no way the economy continues to function without massive Govt intervention.The problem is, the scale required is eye-watering.LAbour's plan to cap prices at the May 2022 value would, according to the Resolution Foundation Twitter thread I posted last night (please read it - it is the clearest description of the scale of the issue I've yet seen) cost £36bn this year and £64bn next year.But here's the rub. That's based on the difference between the April and October cap prices. £1900 to £3550. The expectations now are that to reflect market gas prices, the cap rises to £5000 by April and possibly £7000 by this time next year. If the latter is correct, Labour's plan of holding the cap at £1900 would cost something like £200bn for 2023. And that's before support for business.The scale of this dwarfs the GFC or even, potentially COVID. And I'm hearing nothing from Govt that suggests they are going to be as radical as the Labour plans. If they have a much smaller relief package, as you say, the economy will grind to a halt because even previously comfortable people will have to tighten their belts and massively cut other spending.Here's how hard it's going to hit even the comfortably off.Someone in a large semi with 2-3 kids, using 4000kWh of electric and 20,000kWh of gas a year (both a good bit above average) was paying £1600/year last winter. From October, they'll be paying £5000. By January, that'll be up to £6-7,000 and if the predictions of this time next year are right, it'll be £10,000.That's a lot of spare cash to find even for someone who is comfortably off. It means a lot of other economies which hit the rest of the economy. Less going out. No holiday. No new car etc, etc.In fairness to Zahawi today, he did quite rightly say that the No1 priority has to be helping out those at the very bottom end who have nothing to fall back on, and who are already living with belts tightened to snapping point. They must come first. But the political reality is that it's not only people at the bottom who will struggle. Even someone on £50-60k a year will struggle to fid the money for where next year's bills are going. And the political reality means that they will have to be helped too if the Tories have any chance of surviving this. So I'm expecting a huge wave of Govt support announced in a couple of weeks. Anything less and the next 3-12 months will be nightmarish.
The “knock -on” effect is going to be huge. Old folk wont put their heating on in winter & will get ill as will those with a history of depression which has strong links to debt. Our nhs is already on its arse & cant cope with extra numbers & then theres the threat of further covid.I cant believe a govt can be so incompetent. All they want to do is point the finger of blame on covid or russia. Do something & quick ffs
Quote from: drfchound on August 26, 2022, 09:06:53 amThe chancellor has made comments on the energy prices this morning.Perhaps you didn’t bother to look.Just think, if the Tories hadn’t encouraged Putin to invade Ukraine then the gas prices wouldn't have been as high as they are.At the time of writing no one from Government was available to be interviewed on TV, the Chancellor made a general media comment about every household getting £400, as I said in my post, perhaps you didn’t bother to read the whole post!
The chancellor has made comments on the energy prices this morning.Perhaps you didn’t bother to look.Just think, if the Tories hadn’t encouraged Putin to invade Ukraine then the gas prices wouldn't have been as high as they are.
The very first OP on this thread mentions that our Gas production has doubled but it is being sold on the open market. What's the feasibility of the Government stepping in and Prohibiting Gas from being exported? Can we do that? If we do that and get Canada exporting and Venezuela back to producing and exporting we solve our short term issues and can then do something about the longer term,what do other posters think?
Quote from: Sprotyrover on August 26, 2022, 04:30:23 pmThe very first OP on this thread mentions that our Gas production has doubled but it is being sold on the open market. What's the feasibility of the Government stepping in and Prohibiting Gas from being exported? Can we do that? If we do that and get Canada exporting and Venezuela back to producing and exporting we solve our short term issues and can then do something about the longer term,what do other posters think?Not a route we should go down, that insular attitude is a bad move in the long term.What surprises me is we haven't yet done things that other countries have. Eg turn street lights off, stop lighting buildings up etc.Lots of big energy uses are used to load management at peak demand times (I used to sit in the dark in the office etc) so I'm sure there will be more of that.Either way it's gonna cost many of us a lot of money and that clearly feeds in to the rest of the economy. It may though lead to less working from home particularly over winter.
I get up in a morning and there is already 1£ on the smart meter from midnight, bar turning everything off at the socket and do without my security cameras and internet, I’m not sure where I can use less energy
Quote from: Filo on August 26, 2022, 02:43:57 pmI get up in a morning and there is already 1£ on the smart meter from midnight, bar turning everything off at the socket and do without my security cameras and internet, I’m not sure where I can use less energyThere's more than 70p of that on standing charges - why can't they be scrapped? That's over £250 a year for starters.
Quote from: drfchound on August 26, 2022, 09:06:53 amThe chancellor has made comments on the energy prices this morning.Perhaps you didn’t bother to look.Just think, if the Tories hadn’t encouraged Putin to invade Ukraine then the gas prices wouldn't have been as high as they are.Did the Chancellor say "look, we've known this price hike has been coming for months, so now this has been confirmed I am happy to announce we will be freezing the cap as it stands/giving every household an additional £800 (etc) paid for a slower than necessary reduction in the cap in future years" or similar.?Did he f**k.