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    What really pushes up energy prices

    Robert Powell takes a look at what really causes gas and electricity rates to rise...

    If you're fed up with rising energy bills, there was yet more bad news today. A report in the Telegraph reveals that the government's energy policies will boost energy bills by a further 30% over the next decade.

    The only positive thing one can say about this rise is that at least it's clear why this price rise will happen. Often energy prices rise for seemingly no rhyme or reason, so we thought we'd do some research on what lies behind most energy price rises....

    What they tell you

    Hikes in energy prices have become common place over the last ten months. Almost every member of the 'big six' group of energy companies has upped their rates twice-over since November last year.

    The reason given by energy companies for rate increases rarely strays from the 'party line'. To paraphrase: "Not our fault guv, wholesale prices are increasing."

    Yet looking at these graphs from Consumer Focus comparing wholesale gas and electricity costs to the 'big six' average retail price, it becomes clear that the relationship between wholesale costs and tariff rates is not as close as utility companies make out.

    [Useful: Could you save money by switching provider?]

    What they don't tell you

    The wholesale cost of gas and electricity will always make up a majority of what we pay for our energy. Yet, in terms of the immediate influence on energy bills of wholesale cost fluctuations, the relationship is less clear.

    The wholesale cost of gas makes up around 50% of the price we pay in our bills. So, in theory, if wholesale gas prices drop by 20%, our bills should fall by a tenth. But as I've already noted, this is not the case. The reason for this is the sheer complexity of the gas buying processes that go on within energy companies.

    For example a large proportion of the gas that is delivered to your home will be bought in advance by energy companies. The official line for doing this is to enable providers to 'smooth out the volatility in the wholesale gas market'. However I suspect that stocking up when wholesale prices are low also plays some part.

    The multi-national nature of most energy providers also increases this distortion since no one knows where the money is being made and who is making it.

    Don't get me wrong, wholesale costs undoubtedly play a part in tariff increases. But to suggest that a rise in wholesale costs within a set period directly translates in an immediate rise in retail rates is to simplify the issue.

    Indeed, industry regulator Ofgem has become so concerned about the murky relationship between company profits and wholesale costs that it has deployed a forensic set of accountants to examine the 'big six' energy companies in light of their recent price hikes.

    So what else pushes up energy rates?

    Taxes

    One key reason for energy price hikes is the toxic cocktail of state-levied taxes and the commercial drive behind utilities providers.  Take this example from earlier this year.

    Remember that unexpected reduction in fuel duty back in the Budget? Well, funding for that cut came from an increase in tax on the profits of North Sea oil and gas companies. One such company that felt the pinch of this hike more than most is Centrica — owners of British Gas. In response to the tax hike Centrica decided not to fully re-open its Morecambe gas field — the largest in the country. The company said that with the new hike, gas from the field would be taxed in total at 81%, making profitability marginal.

    The closure of such a facility, that at its peak produced nine million cubic metres of gas a day, obviously hit the wholesale supply side of Centrica as well as British Gas, meaning that if the company was to continue to hit its target profit margins, retail tariffs would have to rise.

    But profit levies aren't the only energy taxes that have been ramping up recently...

    Green levies

    It's estimated that green taxes now make up 15-20% of energy bills. Energy consultants Utilyx forecast that by the end of the decade green taxes will make up more than a third of energy bills — up from the current estimate of 18%.

    The think-tank Global Warming Policy Foundation also contend that green levies make up between £154 and £206 of the £1,032 average annual household spend on gas and electricity. These taxes sit alongside other schemes implemented by the government as part of its commitment to slash Britain's CO2 output by 34% by 2020.

    For example, all energy providers will have to fit smart energy meters into every home they service before the end of the decade. British Gas began installing the touch-screen meters that wirelessly transmit readings last week. However they stated that the roll-out bill would be footed by future savings (from meter reading staff and estimated bills) and not increased bills.

    So why, when taxes play such an important part in energy prices, do providers continue to solely blame wholesale costs for tariff hikes?

    Blame game

    It's up for debate why energy providers rarely mention the impact of taxes on rate hikes. But a fair conclusion could lie in a desire by the utilities industry to not make too many (more) enemies.

    After all, blaming tariff hikes on government-levied tax rises would not translate well to a financially squeezed public, also being hit by upped taxes, while pointing the finger at green levies would roughly translate as the PR equivalent of stapling a 'climate change = rubbish' banner to a polar bear.

    Factor in the possible reaction of politicians to such dissent and it becomes obvious why blaming the faceless, ambiguous 'wholesale market' emerges as a more attractive reason.

    But nevertheless, this does not mean that it is the taxes that are at fault. An environmentally sustainable approach to energy production is obviously needed. Green levies are perfectly justified. However there is a debate to be had about achieving a level of taxation that guarantees both a sustainable and affordable energy sector.

    The real problem here is the commercial drive that fuels private energy companies. It is this commercial drive that shuts down gas plants if profit margins fall below a set level; that passes on taxes to the consumer rather dissolving them in profits; and that obscures the relationship between the wholesale and retail prices of gas and electricity through savvy purchasing and trading.

    Stem this drive to pull profit out of a product that we all require to live, and you'll stem energy price hikes.

    What's your take?

    Why are energy prices rising? Have your say using the comment box below.

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    221 comments

    • george  •  8 months ago
      The real answer is so simple. "GREED"
    • ME  •  8 months ago
      Britsh Gas Electricity etc has to have large profits to pay they FAT SHARE HOLDERS!
      I think all essential's like water gas electricity should be owned by us THE TAX PAYERS,
      • hairy hippy 8 months ago
        It was until it was flogged off cheap by the Tories
      • M 8 months ago
        You're so right Hairy Hippy & some people may die this winter as a result of Margaret Thatchers privatisation policies & the obscene prices that these less than human utility companies have pushed through.
        The government will do absolutely nothing to alleviate the problem because of the extra revenue it creates for their coffers.
        The country is being run by the rich for the rich & the "ordinary people don't exist.
      • Steve 8 months ago
        aint that the truth Margaret thatcher privatised the utility company's with the sole aim of making profits for the boys or yuppies as they where called back then.
        all our utility's are now in the hands of the capitalists who do not give a dam if an old aged pensioner die,s from the cold this winter so long as there share of the profits do not drop.
        i do not believe we will see state owned utility's in my life time because they unlike the banks will never get into financial difficulties because there too busy ripping us all off just as the banks are now doing with higher charges for everything, do not forget the state forced us all to have bank accounts supposedly to simplify the payment of state benefits too the poor???? hmmm really or was it because they then had better control over our money to make even more profits for the capitalists who are the true masters of our society not the puppets in parliament
    • Brit and proud to be  •  8 months ago
      The problem goes much deeper than than just gas and electricity. Governments of all colours have used the privatisation of all the utilities, and British Rail, together with fuel, to fleece the general public for a long time. Of course they allow these companies to raise their prices by levels that would be unacceptable in other walks of life due to the huge tax revenues they receive.
      A couple of years ago, Thames Water were fined £12,000,000 for providing an inadequate service to their customers. It wasn't the government that received an inadequate service. Thames' customers should have got this money. The same applied when Rail Track was was fined millions for over-running their weekend repairs. It wasn't the government that couldn't get to work on the Mondays after, but commuters. Whilst some commuters received compensation, many businesses were hit hard through the lack of staff. The government shouldn't have got this money.
      An oil company buys its raw product, crude oil, and refines it into petrol and sells it on. A steel company buys its raw product, iron ore, refines it (smelt) and sells in on as steel. Can someone tell me the why we have to pay a sewage company that we provide, with its raw product, who like the others sells the refined product (water) for profit? They should be paying us.
      When the utility companies have been sold, a due diligence would have been carried out and future liabilities would have reduced the sale price to take into account the future necessary expenditure. These companies work on ten year plans so it is not as if they came as a suprise. Taking Thames Water as an example, why are customers being told that their bills will go up over a number years to replace old Victorian pipes when this should and was most probably taken into account when the business was sold. Where is the so called competition in the water industry? As someone who runs a business, if I was to tell my customers that I was increasing their bills because I was installing new plant they would soon go to one of my competitors. Installing new equipment is all about becoming more efficient and reducing your cost base and making you more profits in the long term. Water customers have nowhere else to go. It' a monopoly.
      Having just returned from Ireland, I noticed that diesel is on average 8p a litre cheaper than petrol.
      Why are we the only country in Europe where diesel is dearer than petrol? The petrol industry tell us that we have a cleaner diesel in this country. I'm sorry, if its good enough for Europe it should be good enough for us. On top of that, most of the goods that we buy are transported by road on lorries that use diesel and in turn the prices that we pay are directly affected by transport costs. Any government loves it when fuel prices go up due to their increased take in taxes (VAT). Whilst the goverment are currently investigating the huge hikes in gas prices they should also look at the oil companies. Over thirty thousand pensioners die each year as a direct result of the cold. So what does this government do - reduce the heating allowance at a time when heating costs are going off the scale. Prices never go down as quick as they go up when the price of a barrel changes and the fact that oil is bought in dollars which just so happens to be down the tubes.
      Why have we got the highest rail fares in Europe?
      Why have we got the oldest retirement age in Europe? There were riots in France in the last year when their age was raised to 62.
      If it is necessary to pay someone the minimum wage, say £200 per week, why pay an OAP just over £90 when they obviously spend a lot more time at home, especially in the winter, using more heating.
      There are over 2 dozen life extending cancer drugs widely available in europe but not readily available in the UK due we are told because of cost.
      We have all heard the term Rip-off Britain, it has never been more relevant than today.
      • Leonna 8 months ago
        Shurrup. Too long. Too boring.
      • Joaquin Gash 8 months ago
        Most of this happens because, We,the British are the most lilly livered people in the West,we will wear anything they tell us,I am totally pissed off with the lot of it,and when a few weeks ago some kicked off - almost everybody was against it.I can't agree with a lot of what they did,but I was praying they'd do Wasteminster,and the City.Do you think the Police would've stood by then? skulls would've been cracked immediatly.The whole nation is divided,and we seem intent on disagreeing with each other and racing to the bottom.The country is finished,absolutely no doubt about it,in 20 yrs time we will be like Ireland a total basket case,and so will the EU. When a normal unskilled man cannot pay his way in life from his wage,something is desperately wrong.And he can't,and the way things are going nor will the Skilled man,and then what? Rip Off Britain indeed.....
      • Al 8 months ago
        ....and then what? Business leaders leaving like rats from a sinking ship.

        Frank can you get support for 'Unhappy with UK government' on Facebook?
    • Jonathan  •  8 months ago
      So Its ok for Energy companies to make a rediculous profit of around £300million this year alone and increase our costs of between 11%-18%
      How about you only make for example £250million next year and keep our costs the same or dare I say only make £200million and cut our costs slightly.
      Oh NO, the government wont allow that. The fatcats wont make enough and government lose out on tax.
      • Al 8 months ago
        Everyone should switch off everything electrical (except fridge maybe) for at least 2 hours a day to protest. Just think of the electricity not sold if this happened every day for a week. Should attract some attention. People power!
    • RIPPED OFF  •  8 months ago
      had the big bills - now retired, ripped out the gas fire - going back to wood and smokeless.
    • Mr J  •  8 months ago
      apathy rules eh ? don't really care mate.

      the govt blame the utilities and the utilities blame 'a variety of things'....

      in the meantime bills go up, and we get screwed...

      it's getting time to take a stance folks, stand up and be counted !

      the politician's are taking the pee, having orchestrated events to this level....

      what ARE you going to do about it ???? they have set things up to tax your grandchildren's grandchildren!!!! And it's going to be your collective apathetic faults.
    • MARK  •  8 months ago
      they must think we are stupid, its greed, nothing else
      • mick b 8 months ago
        Yes Mark , itspure greed about time these companys were taken back into public ownership . and used as a none profit organisations But then the torys wouldnt like that , to them if it dont make a profit its no good
      • MARK 8 months ago
        ye
    • ArchieTopp  •  8 months ago
      I'll tell you what pushes up energy prices....sheer, unadulterated f***ing GREED.
      The dispicable avarice blatantly shown by all the other institutions
      that also enjoy a 'captured' market, such as; banks, insurance companies, petrolium suppliers,
      various government departments and local councils....the list goes on and on...it just makes me sick.
      And yet, despite the apathetic whining the people of this country partake in when faced with the
      ever-increasing demands from these shysters, we merely bend over further to allow them to
      shaft us even deeper. It has got to stop.
      • Grumpy old man! 8 months ago
        Well said, mate! I am also of the opinion that this 'green' rubbish is nothing more than a stealth tax for the government - whichever one is in power - to rip us off even more. There is not single shred of scientific evidence that we are responsible for climate change. In the 17th century ships were sailing through the Arctic and it had almost disappeared but the polar bears are still with us - AND increasing their numbers!!
        It is a natural phenomena that happens and the fact of violent activity on the sun which is growing even stronger is to blame. The marvellous government scientists said that the carbon dioxide was warming up the sea but as every physicist knows warming seas PRODUCE more carbon dioxide not the other way round.
      • dks 8 months ago
        hi i totaly disagree with the green taxes they are b------t ,i work in the building industry all the insulation that goes into a new build is good to a degree but when you are working on old propertys you end up with the main part of the house that was built 50 plus years ago with u values that dont comply with currant building control requirements & a new extension that has over the top with insulation basicly its make your house like wearing a jumper with one sleeve, all the extra cost of providing extra insulation is not cost efective as with the cost of raw materials to make the insulation & energy to produce it you will never ever recoupe you money, all green means is more money in goverment purse, local councils waste money on loads of unessary works & services if any private uk company charged a customer like the utilty companys, banks ,goverment do they would be serving time for ripping people off, no one in this country pays 20% or 30% or 40% tax we all pay at least 70% if every one just stopped and looked what they paid tax on i think they would be amazed what they paid out, just think income tax, tax on fuel, council tax, car tax, vat, tax on utilty bills,tax on any luxuries the list is endless, utilities cost are not luxuries they are necessities,this is 100% rip off britain you try are make these charges if you were running a bussiness you would soon be behind bars this country would rather bank rupt a uk bussines or see some one loose there home than help them but when a foreign country needs help or some one needs a war we are there with unlimited money
    • ANTHONY  •  8 months ago
      wasn't it better when we owned the energy companies. Not as easy to rip of consumers when you get elected every 5 years or so, wouldn't it be nice to be able to vote the greedy "fat cats" out of a job.
      In truth it is theft, pure and simple, energy suppliers, banks, insurance companies etc. all are guilty as sin
    • RUTH  •  8 months ago
      one word ' GREED'
    • dks  •  8 months ago
      we are in rip off britain energy bills of any kind should not have vat added its not a luxury but its now a nessesitie,some people think they only pay 20 or 30 or 40% tax but you sit back and add all the taxes we pay from car tax to council tax its more like we pay 70% tax,it would nice to be in a postion to be able just to put up are costs just when we are short of a bit of cash, there billions of pounds wasted in the uk by local goverment on unessary things,the powers that be would rather sit back & watch a company go bankrupt or someone loose there house rather than help but they pump millions into other countrys, i agree we should recycle where possible but i would like to point out that the goverment offices where live were demolished they scrapped loads of hard wood work tops & furniture it all had to goes to be burnt it had only been used as a tax office i was working for a builder who stripped out these buildings and we took as much away as we could as it was all solid hard wood teak & oak so the goverment dont know the first thing about recycling only tax and that what green tax is ball ---- tax, the amount insulation we put in new builds & extensions costs loads of money and uses raw materials & energy to produce we will never get this money back new eco gas boilers do use less gas but they dont last as long as the old boilers so you replace them more often, loads of this eco is politics we are being brain washed into beliveing we are helping but if there was no money in it for the goverment they would not be interested
    • klee63  •  8 months ago
      So why are other European countries paying less for their gas?
    • Alex O J  •  8 months ago
      Government taxes and the good old play on green house taxes. It is ok if our old age pensioners freeze to death as long as we pretend we are saving the enviroment. What a load of bullocks, quit takin the pi£$.
    • C.Warman  •  8 months ago
      i have a friend that works for the national gas grid,and i asked her why we don't store gas in this country like we once did, and her reply shocked me,

      we don't store gas because the government, don,t want it to be stored.
      the only logical explanation i can think of for this is the mps have shares and vast amounts of them in the gas companies.

      so yet again these conning public servants are lining there pockets at the misery of the hard working people of this country.
    • DAVID B  •  8 months ago
      In every statement I have read, no mention has been made of the 55%+ Daily Service Charge increase.
      If the providers can blatantly show this increase, what can they get away with in hidden charges.
    • Mervyn  •  8 months ago
      Electricity and gas were both cheaper when the industry was publicly owned (and I mean by the British public, not subsiaries of foreign state owned utilities such as EDF). Tariffs were simpler, without the need to "go compare". The CEGB as the major power generator in the UK had a policy of not putting all its eggs in one basket and had a mix of coal-fired, oil fired and nuclear generation. The dash for gas, following privatisation, has nearly exhausted the North Sea gas supplies, so we are again reliant on expensive imports. While we the people are paying the price of this, the politicians who got us into this mess (Thatcher through to Blair and their cronies) do not seem to have suffered in any way.
    • Mike P  •  8 months ago
      Why waste time with all the maths!!! just look at the profits line and the rest is lies. But there is no cartel- they insist. What price Government controls - ask a pensioner.
      What we need is a "grey vote movement" then you would see the Government become effective.
      I am available!!
    • jonny  •  8 months ago
      THEY ARE JUST A SET OF ROBBING ########.
    • avril  •  8 months ago
      they forgot to mention "GREED" !!!
    • simon  •  8 months ago
      Its absolutely disgusting,theses people should be tried for genocide, the number of old people that die from not being able to afford to heat their homes is an abomination,theses people should be hung in the streets,