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Switched supplier? Your smart meter will stay 'dumb' even if you switch back

Energy savers? Phil Spencer and Kirstie Allsopp back the smart meter roll-out - Getty Images Europe
Energy savers? Phil Spencer and Kirstie Allsopp back the smart meter roll-out - Getty Images Europe

Customers whose smart meters have “gone dumb” following a switch will not regain the lost functions if they return to their original energy supplier, Telegraph Money has learnt.

The meters lose the ability to send readings automatically and track energy usage in pounds and pence – two of the key benefits of smart meters – after a supplier switch.

It has now emerged that even if you switch back to the supplier that installed the meter, it will stay dumb.

The discovery comes after Telegraph Moneycalled on the Government to put the brakes on the £11bn roll-out until the switching issue is fixed by a new breed of meters, due to be installed at scale by the end of the year.

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Bryan Lowe, 76, who lives near Derby, had his meter installed in 2015 by E.ON. The following year he switched to EDF Energy for a better deal before switching back to E.ON to take advantage of a new tariff in 2017.

He had expected to lose smart functionality when he moved to EDF but was surprised to be told by E.ON that his meter would stay dumb despite the switch back.

He said: “When you buy an investment they tell you that you may not get your money back. Why can’t there be a warning in all these adverts for smart meters saying if you switch you might lose your smart functions?”

A smart meter
Smart meters are supposed to tell us our energy usage in pounds and pence

A spokesman for E.ON said it makes it clear to customers before a smart meter is fitted that they could lose functions in a switch.

She added that the company is unable to reconnect to previous customers’ smart meters but that this will be fixed in the future.

A technical expert at Foresight Metering, a smart meter manufacturer, said it should be possible for the meter to be reconnected to a supplier’s system. However it would depend on various factors, including whether the meter’s sim card was still live and how much software had progressed since the date of installation.

He equated it to finding an iPhone 4 in the cupboard and trying to upgrade it to Apple’s latest operating system.

Energy crisis: more than half of smart meters 'go dumb' after switching
Energy crisis: more than half of smart meters 'go dumb' after switching

Last week, Labour and Conservative MPs backed our calls for the Government to stop the roll-out until smart meters are fully switchable.

The roll-out of a new type of meter that would not lose functionality after switching was supposed to start this month but has been pushed back twice. Around 2,000 are currently operational in British homes.

The early “dumb” smart meters have been criticised as a barrier to switching, widely accepted as the best way to save money on your bills.

These meters will be enrolled on to a national network, theoretically fixing the issue, but this could take until the end of 2019.

Robert Cheesewright, of Smart Energy GB, a group established to promote smart meters, said this network “will enable seamless switching between suppliers”.

He added: “So unless you switch more than once a year there’s no need to delay getting a smart meter.”