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Energy firms told to pass on price cuts by the Government

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Press Association
Press Association
Editor
2 June 2015

Energy firms are facing increased pressure from the Government to pass on a fall in wholesale costs – the price providers pay for energy – to consumers by slashing household bills.

According to the latest research by regulator Ofgem, wholesale gas and electricity costs were £80 lower than they were estimated at a year ago. Join MoneySavingExpert.com's Cheap Energy Club to start cutting your bills now.

And Amber Rudd, the Energy and Climate Change Secretary, has written to the big six energy companies – British Gas, EDF, Eon, Npower, Scottish Power and SSE – asking them to adjust their prices as a result of this, and because Labour's pre-election pledge to impose a prize freeze is off the table.

Former Labour leader Ed Miliband promised a price freeze and new powers for Ofgem to enforce reductions, if they were elected, but the measure was criticised by the Conservatives, who said it actually provided a barrier to cuts.

'I intend to keep the pressure on them to act'

Rudd told the Daily Mail: "Labour's price freeze was a theme for why they were unable to reduce prices before the election. Now that threat is no longer there, I intend to keep up the pressure on them to act."

She added: "My focus is to get the best deal for consumers and the department is working hard to keep energy bills as low as possible. That is why I have written to energy companies asking them what their plans are to lower bills for hard-working British bill payers."

A spokesman for trade association, Energy UK, told the paper: "Our members will be replying to the Secretary of State in due course and the industry as a whole is keen to work constructively with the new Government to ensure energy security at a price everyone can afford."

Energy market investigation

The Competition and Markets Authority is currently undertaking a wide-ranging probe into the energy market to see if customers are being unfairly treated by the UK's dominant big six energy suppliers. See the Competition watchdog to probe big six energy companies MSE News story for more information on this.

Last week SSE, the UK's second biggest supplier, reported a 39% increase in profits to £456.8 million for the year to 31 March, meaning it made an average of £69 from the supply of household electricity and gas – before tax and interest payments.

But it also revealed it had lost more than 500,000 customer accounts in the last year, despite its pledge to freeze bills until at least July 2016, citing "increasingly challenging and highly competitive market conditions".

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