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Quote from: rich1471 on August 02, 2022, 08:16:26 pmThere is a movement were people are not paying their water bills already and queuing at public taps to fill up with water ,search online Why are they doing that when water companies don't have the authority to turn off a domestic water supply, even when there is an outstanding debt at the property?
There is a movement were people are not paying their water bills already and queuing at public taps to fill up with water ,search online
I can't get my head around this. If gas is dearer in the global markets, how are they making so much money?They are either charging us a hell of a lot more than they should to cover the rise or the price has fallen and they haven't passed that on yet.
This is correct, BRR (post16)Quote from: Bristol Red Rover on August 02, 2022, 09:19:11 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on August 02, 2022, 09:00:57 pmAlbie.Run it by me how you stop the increase in the price of gas on the global markets by nationalisation. Isn't it the case that a nationalised energy industry could simply stop increases. So they would still be buying the fuel at high cost, but that can be covered partially by taxing certain companies as well as government borrowing.The cost of the borrowing would partly be covered by the economy being in a better state with the inflationary effect of high cost fuel neutralised. They could also sort out the Ukraine crisis rather than "fueling" it as is current.Then bring in Universal Basic Income and the economy would flourish..The French have limited price rises in energy to 4% with the sector largely in public ownership.The point BST raises about gas prices is addressed by reducing dependence on imported gas bought on spot markets. Recommissioning Rough as a storage facility (owned by Centrica) would help short term, but electrifying some current gas uses would be comparatively easy for the UK to do.The wider energy problem is electricity prices being tied to the cost of gas in the UK.Break that chain, and then with the Dogger Bank windfarm on stream, the UK is set to be a net exporter of electricity via the interconnectors to Europe. Blaming the whole crisis solely on the wholesale price of gas is just a distraction ploy.Yes, it has happened, but we have the tools in the box to prevent serious harm....that harm is not being prevented by simply cranking up the bills for working people.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on August 02, 2022, 09:00:57 pmAlbie.Run it by me how you stop the increase in the price of gas on the global markets by nationalisation. Isn't it the case that a nationalised energy industry could simply stop increases. So they would still be buying the fuel at high cost, but that can be covered partially by taxing certain companies as well as government borrowing.The cost of the borrowing would partly be covered by the economy being in a better state with the inflationary effect of high cost fuel neutralised. They could also sort out the Ukraine crisis rather than "fueling" it as is current.Then bring in Universal Basic Income and the economy would flourish.
Albie.Run it by me how you stop the increase in the price of gas on the global markets by nationalisation.
I’m trying to build a substantial credit balance during these summer months by making extra payments when I can, currently £250 in credit but expect that to be wiped out within a couple of months during winter
Quote from: Bristol Red Rover on August 02, 2022, 09:25:23 pmQuote from: BigH on August 02, 2022, 09:14:08 pm.... and the risk of being the butt of endless jokes about corporate greed. Just look at what that did for the banking sector...I'm not sure that the energy industry moghuls are any more bothered about being the butt of jokes any more than bankers are. I'm sure they're more focused on buying their next car, installing a bigger swimming pool, buying property in Los Angeles, and ensuring their bit on the side is kept happy and won't rock the family boat.I'm not sure they are too. But when their shareholders see the stock price fall by 50% and the gravy train come to a juddering halt then they'll be off like a bride's nightie.
Quote from: BigH on August 02, 2022, 09:14:08 pm.... and the risk of being the butt of endless jokes about corporate greed. Just look at what that did for the banking sector...I'm not sure that the energy industry moghuls are any more bothered about being the butt of jokes any more than bankers are. I'm sure they're more focused on buying their next car, installing a bigger swimming pool, buying property in Los Angeles, and ensuring their bit on the side is kept happy and won't rock the family boat.
.... and the risk of being the butt of endless jokes about corporate greed. Just look at what that did for the banking sector...
The UK has significant supplies of both oil and gas (we were a next exporter of oil in 2020). Thus if the government wished it coud reduce the cost of UK produced oil and gas to UK suppliers and thus UK consumers.It wont because:a) it benefits from higher prices in tax and VATb) a significan number of individuals connected with government have links with the oil/gas industry (LIz Truss for instance worked for Shell for 4 years)
My energy supplier wanted £300 a month in direct debit payments.I've cancelled that and will pay monthly for what I use, currently using around £150.
Quote from: Nudga on August 03, 2022, 09:04:17 amMy energy supplier wanted £300 a month in direct debit payments.I've cancelled that and will pay monthly for what I use, currently using around £150.Great for summer when usage drops down a lot, but you'll probably use a lot more than the average in winter. Can you pay over £300 of usage per month then?
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on August 02, 2022, 10:25:00 pmQuote from: rich1471 on August 02, 2022, 08:16:26 pmThere is a movement were people are not paying their water bills already and queuing at public taps to fill up with water ,search online Why are they doing that when water companies don't have the authority to turn off a domestic water supply, even when there is an outstanding debt at the property?I'm guessing that if you are on a Meter you will be racking up a Bill which you would be liable to payIf you stop using water the Meter would show you didn't owe them anything. However 2 things spring to mind ... There would be a standing charge of course and if you are not close to a "tap" when collecting water it will be a fight pain in the a**e
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on August 03, 2022, 11:20:12 amQuote from: Nudga on August 03, 2022, 09:04:17 amMy energy supplier wanted £300 a month in direct debit payments.I've cancelled that and will pay monthly for what I use, currently using around £150.Great for summer when usage drops down a lot, but you'll probably use a lot more than the average in winter. Can you pay over £300 of usage per month then?Got three wood burners in my house and around 3 ton of wood. Hopefully won't go up too much
Quote from: wilts rover on August 03, 2022, 05:58:33 amThe UK has significant supplies of both oil and gas (we were a next exporter of oil in 2020). Thus if the government wished it coud reduce the cost of UK produced oil and gas to UK suppliers and thus UK consumers.It wont because:a) it benefits from higher prices in tax and VATb) a significan number of individuals connected with government have links with the oil/gas industry (LIz Truss for instance worked for Shell for 4 years)Hydrocarbon Fuel Duty is NOT an ad valorem tax.
Quote from: Nudga on August 03, 2022, 11:57:03 amQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on August 03, 2022, 11:20:12 amQuote from: Nudga on August 03, 2022, 09:04:17 amMy energy supplier wanted £300 a month in direct debit payments.I've cancelled that and will pay monthly for what I use, currently using around £150.Great for summer when usage drops down a lot, but you'll probably use a lot more than the average in winter. Can you pay over £300 of usage per month then?Got three wood burners in my house and around 3 ton of wood. Hopefully won't go up too much Isn't the £300 a month based upon your previous annual energy usage though, including the use of your woodburners to lower it?
BST,There are so many basic mistakes in your view of energy markets,it is difficult to know where to start.You seem to be content with higher prices to UK consumers being funnelled into share buybacks by the likes of BP, as long as government gives a one-off sweetener to lessen the burden. 1)"But that is absolutely not the only way to protect consumers of energy.The other way is to allow the market to set the price, then subsidise consumers by giving them money to cover those higher costs. Govt could do that by raising taxes elsewhere or by borrowing.The overall effect on suppliers, consumers and Govt finances is identical in both cases."This is complete nonsense.Consumers of energy are NOT one group with similar profiles and concerns.How does this protect industrial and commercial energy users?.....There are likely to be significant closures of businesses unable to pass on costs in full, or vulnerable to demand reductions on the basis of marginal price increases.Far from being an identical impact on all sectors, it is very different for each.The impact on Govt finances, for example, will depend on the tax income from reduced economic activity.2)"You're muddying the waters by saying that only nationalisation can solve the immediate crisis."No, I am saying that nationalisation can only resolve the crisis over time, because you need to have control over energy infrastructure provision.3)"You are muddling up long term issues of our energy mix with the short term price crisis."Wrong...they are not separate problems.How you respond to the price rise on international spot markets will have a knock on effect on the choices you make going forwards. As long as the UK locks electricity prices in step with gas high energy costs are baked into the economy.The issue is whether you add to the problem by allowing prices to rise, only to face further stress from increases every 6 months.This is not a one-off excess profit windfall, it is a stepped increase in imported gas prices which will continue with supply restrictions. Windfall taxes every 6 months make no sense at all, having failed to prevent the price rise and absorbed it into the national tax base.4) "I also entirely agree that we should be reliant far less on gas in the future, and far more on other sources. But that's going to take years to effect."It is important for the climate breakdown that it does not "take years to take effect". There is no good reason why it should take years to change the balance of supply to electricity as the primary source.Under the current system, electricity suppliers will choose to sell on international markets if the price is higher.The UK could be selling leccy from Dogger Bank to maximise returns, not to reduce fuel poverty in the UK."You COULD deal with that by nationalising all the energy supply companies."It is NOT just a matter of energy supply companies, it is also a matter of energy production infrastructure.5)"By the way, France is massively insulated from global gas prices because it uses half the amount of gas per head than we do. Predominantly because they lean so heavily on nuclear power to produce so much of their energy needs. A policy that you disagree with."France is in a better position because it is further forward in electrification.Historically, that is because of nuclear, but that would not be the most cost effective way to electrify from the options today.A high proportion of French nuclear is offline nowadays as the industry struggles to maintain available capacity.The question is how quickly the UK can electrify, and what is the production method best suited to that transition.Offshore wind beats new nuclear by any metric of time and cost....no-one in their right mind would commission new nuclear (lead time over 15 years) to deliver a quick transition.As I said in the earlier post, just prevent the price increase in the first place.From that base, the UK needs to reform the whole energy sector to address the contribution of energy to climate change.If you allow Ofgem to raise the cap, the impacts will be massively detrimental across the UK economy.
I thought the rise in bills in June was meant to be 50%?My bill has just gone up from £128.36 to £260.99. That's a rise of over 100%.How much longer are we, the working class, going to put up with this?
Quote from: scawsby steve on August 03, 2022, 07:56:16 pmI thought the rise in bills in June was meant to be 50%?My bill has just gone up from £128.36 to £260.99. That's a rise of over 100%.How much longer are we, the working class, going to put up with this? Have you come to the end of a deal and gone straight onto your supplier's standard tariff?
Have you tried looking for a new deal elsewhere?They always stiff you when you go onto a standard tariff. But I don't know if there are any deals out there right now. Mine is due in two months.