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These heaters pose serious risk to health and safety, warns charity

Modern electric convection heater on floor at home
Online sellers are exploiting the cost-of-living crisis to push dangerous heaters to UK consumers. Photo: PA/Alamy (olga Yastremska)

Electric heaters that pose a serious risk of electric shock are being sold to UK consumers, a safety charity has warned.

Electrical Safety First tested electric heaters from Keilini, HeatPal and InstaHeat ⁠— all available online ⁠— and found that all three heaters posed a serious risk of electric shock, with mains plugs not meeting UK safety standards.

Two of the heaters had such poorly-made plugs there was a risk of the pins breaking off when plugged into a socket, putting the user at risk of an electric shock.

Read more: Buy now, pay later: How new regulation will protect consumers

The Keilini heater had no UK plug whatsoever, instead being fitted with an EU mains plug and a highly dangerous, substandard UK travel adaptor with no fuse, creating a fire risk. All three heaters were missing safety standard CE marks.

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Electrical Safety First chief executive Lesley Rudd said: “It is callous that these sellers are pushing dangerous products they know are going to be sought after by hard up households during an energy crisis.

“Consumers are handing over their hard-earned cash and in exchange receiving a product that puts their safety at risk.

“Claims made about safety found on adverts for these heaters are highly misleading. We urge shoppers to stick to reputable high street stores or go directly to their online websites to ensure the product you’re purchasing is safe.”

Read: UK pay rises at fastest rate in 20 years but fails to keep up with inflation

The charity investigated after seeing ads which claimed the devices would help households save on their energy bills.

The ads, for the InstaHeat, Keilini, Heater Pro and Heater Pro X, all suggested they were a cheaper alternative to gas central heating and could rapidly warm a room.

Electrical Safety First has reported its findings to the government’s Office for Product Safety and Standards and the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA).

Watch: Space heater too close to things that can burn caused fire

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