Energy price cap: Bill shock for millions as rises hit
News / Fri 1st Apr 2022 at 05:20am
MILLIONS of people will now feel the impact of an unprecedented £700-a-year rise in energy costs – at the same time as a host of bill hikes take effect reports the BBC.
The 54% rise in the energy price cap means a household using a typical amount of gas and electricity will now pay £1,971 per year.
A further rise pushing the annual bill up to £2,600 should be expected in October, one analyst has told the BBC.

Council tax, water bills and car tax are also going up for some on 1 April.
Minimum wage rates are rising which, along with some financial support from the government, is partially softening the blow.
The £693 a year rise in a typical energy bill will affect 18 million households, with 4.5 million customers on prepayment meters facing an even bigger increase of £708 a year.
Prices in general are rising at their fastest rate for 30 years, but the sudden increase in the cost of energy is the most significant for individuals. A number of suppliers’ websites have struggled to cope as customers provided meter readings to ensure they paid no more than was absolutely required.
Dame Clare Moriarty, chief executive of Citizens Advice, said: “The energy price cap rise will be potentially ruinous for millions of people across the country. It comes just as another new, bleak record is set for people needing crisis support from us.”
The governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey, said the country is facing the biggest single shock from energy prices since the 1970s. It is the largest increase, by far, in the energy regulator Ofgem’s price cap, since it was introduced.
The cap, set every six months for England. Wales and Scotland, is designed to protect domestic customers from the volatility of wholesale energy prices.
However, official forecasters and analysts have warned people to be braced for another huge rise in energy bills when the next cap takes effect in October. Wholesale prices have been affected by the war in Ukraine and ongoing pressure on suppliers.
This could add another £629 to a typical bill in October, according to the most up-to-date prediction, provided to the BBC from leading energy consultancy firm Cornwall Insight.
If this proved to be accurate, then the average bill next winter would be double that of the winter just gone. A typical bill is expected to fall back to the current level in summer 2023, although longer-term forecasts are tricky.
Chris O’Shea, chief executive of Centrica, which owns the UK’s largest supplier British Gas, said his businesses was supporting struggling customers and was giving grants to those most in need.
“We would love to do more. The reality is that for a retail energy company, the market has gone through quite a change, and profits have reduced quite substantially,” he told the BBC’s Big Green Money Show.
However, he accepted that profits had risen sharply for the heavily taxed exploration arm of the business.
Welcome to your green energy future! Cheap green energy for everyone we were told! We have all been sold down the river yet again.
With all these rises our MP Robert Halfon voted to go against the Election pledge and to not give the Pensioners the rise they were promised, Try living on a Pension Robert, By the way Robert are you going to take your Rise of over £2000 ?
On a more serious note, what do you think will kill more people 1- the covid 19 pandemic 2- the cost of living crisis to pay for the pandemic( and other follies) Answer in 5 years time.
As always Government decisions will put profit before people. A rise in the price cap keeps profits up for the energy companies and sod the consumer. Typical Tories.
4 Comments for Energy price cap: Bill shock for millions as rises hit: