Energy Prices (Strictly NO referrals!)

I saw this in the government's plan.

If you’re on a standard variable tariff​

The average unit price for dual fuel customers paying by direct debit will be limited to 34.0p/kWh for electricity and 10.3p/kWh for gas, inclusive of VAT, from 1 October.

These unit prices have been passed to suppliers to ensure that they are used to calculate bills on time for 1 October.

Energy suppliers will adjust standard variable tariffs automatically. Customers on standard variable tariffs do not need to take any action to get the benefits of this scheme.

I also read that

If you’re on a fixed tariff​

If you’re on a fixed tariff at a higher rate caused by recent energy price rises, your unit prices will be reduced by 17p/kWh for electricity and 4.2p/kWh for gas.

These unit prices have been passed to suppliers to ensure that they are used to calculate bills on time for 1 October.

As Next Online V19 was something like electricity 60p per unit and gas 15p surely we'd be better changing to SVR as electricity will cost 34p on SVR compared to the 60-17= 43p if on a fixed tariff?
@Troop
 
So sometime last year my provider went pop and I ended up with EDF which would never have been my choice and their service/smarts are about what I'd expect.

I'm on a variable tarrif, is it fair to assume I could switch now to another supplier on variable and they'll both be capped at the max meaning no change in the pricing?
 
But the fact you pay over the cap peak is offset by the shift to lower price energy. Incentivising off peak.

Lowering the peak to cap just means the government pay for it. Despite you ultimately paying less than a all day price cap rate
 
I hope so, just cap everything above the cap rate to the cap price, the easy way to do it.

Easy, maybe. But also potentially expensive. It would basically be a blank cheque given from government to industry, with the government agreeing to subsidise any unit rate down to 35p per kWh (electricity) and 10p per kWh (gas). Some households (those that fixed fairly recently) could be seeing double (or more) the subsidy which they'll be given with a fixed discount.
 
We don't use any heating here at all and haven't had heating on since last October and yeah 1 5min shower a day is enough to use minimum of 30kWh of gas a month so really boggles mind.

Do only use around 200kWh of electric though. That I understand. Just not sure how to get gas down. The basics of some hob cooking and hot water is 250kWh a month approx

Like I said, the only thing we use gas for is heating and hot water (combi boiler), everything else, including the shower (cold water feed only), is electric. Does your boiler have a warm start "feature" that keeps the hot water in the pipes warm? Our's has that and I found it to be a real money burner so I disabled it.

Wow that electric is low do you have solar?

No solar or anything like that, just me being tight fisted. I have swapped every light in the house plus the outside light to LED's, bought a plug in energy monitor donkey's years ago to find out what the most power hungry items were and either replaced them with more efficient models or moderated their use. We had to replace the washing machine earlier in the year as our old Beko one was playing up. We bought a 10 kg Haier with direct drive and on Eco mode it does a full load using only 0.246 kwh compared to the old one's 0.465 kwh for a comparitive program. I have a fan controller with live at the wall power draw in it's display so know exactly how much my pc is pulling at any time which led to me undervolting the gpu and saving a peak of 110w (it varies according to what I am doing). We have had a British Gas energy display for 12-15 years so that I can keep a eye on real time and daily electricity useage which is why the smart meter we are having installed next month will not make the slightest difference to me. I also fine tuned the boiler on the heating side when we had gas central heating installed a few years ago. The installers and our housing association said it needs to run at 75 degrees C which we found to be ridiculously expensive so I dropped it to 55 degrees. Yes the house takes longer to heat up but once it's up to temperature it's more than enough and I save two thirds on my heating cost. I have also now dropped the hot water temp from 55 degrees C to 50 degrees C which knocked just over 11 kwh off our gas bill last month. We have just bought a air fryer as well so the cooker will be used much less which should save us a considerable chunk of energy as it's by far the most power hungry device in the house.
 
Easy, maybe. But also potentially expensive. It would basically be a blank cheque given from government to industry, with the government agreeing to subsidise any unit rate down to 35p per kWh (electricity) and 10p per kWh (gas). Some households (those that fixed fairly recently) could be seeing double (or more) the subsidy which they'll be given with a fixed discount.
exactly - we're waiting for legislation, but allowing vendors to pick&mix subsidy by reducing fixed rate tarif peak rate (octopus go say) to subsidised 34p and, simultaneously permitting a cheap overnight rate, which, that would cross-subsidise, isn't the spirit, and would cost tax-payer more,

This 17p reduction on fixed seems a specific octopus related suggestion which would move that peak tarif to svp's 34p



...
... r4news just talking about 70% pub/club closure/mothball unless they have help, would be interesting to see their energy use breakdown
(if they turned pub heating right down like many people will do at home))


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We're at ~£10k per month just for electricity across two venues. Fortunately there's some time left to run on the gas fix (Calour) from before this crisis started. Plus both venues have log burners, meaning we can limit gas use for heating.

Still crazy though. Takes ~£30k of revenue each month just to cover electricity costs :eek:
 
Going to be interesting to see how the fixed tariff discount impacts smart tariffs. Octopus Go (at ~40p day and 7.5p night rate) currently costs me (on average) slightly less than the current cap. However, my day rate is above the Energy Price Guarantee.

I'm not relying on getting assistance by any means. I'm content (given current market conditions) with my fixed deal. But curious to see what happens.

my guess is overnight stays the same, daytime rate drops to 34p/kwh, but the news from ofgem about reducing fixed prices by a fixed amount seems random, so in theory the daytime rate could drop by 17p/kwh down to 23p/kwh which would make it sort of ridiculously OP.

Yeah so i've had a discussion about this and been doing a bit of digging.

The problem we have is the Gov originally came out to the suppliers and said everyone paying over the Gov cap will be reduced to the Gov cap price and anyone on a fix thats higher than the Gov cap will be reduced to whatever the cap will be, 34p elec and 10.3p gas. So the message suppliers were going out with was "Dont do anything, if your fixed higher your fix will be changed to the Gov cap price if you arent fixed then you will be on the Gov cap anyway".

The comms from the Gov to suppliers is now anyone on the SVT will move onto the Gov cap prices. Anyone on a fixed tarrif will have their tarrif reduced to a minimum of the Gov cap. However if you fixed massively higher than the Gov cap you will get a reduction of upto 17p Elec and 4.2p Gas to bring you down to the Gov cap however you may still pay higher prices than the Gov cap if your fixed price was so high that even after the max discount you are still above the cap price.


See below scenarios

1) You are on current SVT

You will move to the new SVT of 34p elec and 10.3p gas as default

2) You fixed at 44p elec and 11.3 gas
You will see your fixed prices be reduced to 34p elec and 10.3p gas

3) You fixed at 68p elec and 16p gas
Your fixed rates will be reduced by 17p Elec and 4.2 gas and your NEW rates would be 51p elec and 11.8 gas which is above the Gov cap

4) You fixed and 1 of your rates, either offpeak elec or gas is lower than the gov cap but the onpeak or elec is higher
This is unclear and i've seen no information regarding what happens here but it would be reasonable to assume a 50/50 chance the higher rate would drop to whatever the cap price is.

There is no info from any supplier that i know of at the moment or the Gov as to whats going to happen for E7 electric customers.

Based on the above and current info. If you are fixed and you fall into scenario 3 it would be beneficial to exit your fixed price if you have low or no exit fees and go onto the Gov cap. However considering how quickly the info is changing i would wait to see what your supplier communicates to you first.
 
Wonder why higher price fixes will only be reduced by 17p/kwh and not down to cap?

Surely most people on longer term fixes, paying (in your example 51p/kwh after reduction) wouldn't simply switch to SVR tariff on same supplier.

Boom! 34p/kwh instead of 51p/kwh.
 
Yeah so i've had a discussion about this and been doing a bit of digging.

The problem we have is the Gov originally came out to the suppliers and said everyone paying over the Gov cap will be reduced to the Gov cap price and anyone on a fix thats higher than the Gov cap will be reduced to whatever the cap will be, 34p elec and 10.3p gas. So the message suppliers were going out with was "Dont do anything, if your fixed higher your fix will be changed to the Gov cap price if you arent fixed then you will be on the Gov cap anyway".

The comms from the Gov to suppliers is now anyone on the SVT will move onto the Gov cap prices. Anyone on a fixed tarrif will have their tarrif reduced to a minum of the Gov cap. However if you fixed massively higher than the Gov cap you will get a reduction of 17p Elec and 4.2p Gas however you may still pay higher than the Gov cap if your fixed price was so high that even after the discount you are above the cap price.


See below scenarios

1) You are on current SVT

You will move to the new SVT of 34p elec and 10.3p gas as default

2) You fixed at 44p elec and 11.3 gas
You will see your fixed prices be reduced to 34p elec and 10.3p gas

3) You fixed at 68p elec and 16p gas
Your fixed rates will be reduced by 17p Elec and 4.2 gas and your NEW rates would be 51p elec and 11.8 gas which is above the Gov cap

4) You fixed and 1 of your rates, either offpeak elec or gas is lower than the gov cap but the onpeak or elec is higher
This is unclear and i've seen no information regarding what happens here but it would be reasonable to assume a 50/50 chance the higher rate would drop to whatever the cap price is.

There is no info from any supplier that i know of at the moment or the Gov as to whats going to happen for E7 electric customers.

Based on the above and current info. If you are fixed and you fall into scenario 3 it would be beneficial to exit your fixed price if you have low or no exit fees and go onto the Gov cap. However considering how quickly the info is changing i would wait to see what your supplier communicates to you first.
And heating oil?
 
Wonder why higher price fixes will only be reduced by 17p/kwh and not down to cap?

Surely most people on longer term fixes, paying (in your example 51p/kwh after reduction) wouldn't simply switch to SVR tariff on same supplier.

Boom! 34p/kwh instead of 51p/kwh.
I believe its because they are using the ******** average house usage figures to work out the discount and to reduce it from the £3500 that was due in Oct to £2500 its based on x amount of kwh elec and x amount fo kwh gas and they worked the reduction from that. It's so retarded
 
Yea fair enough, your post was very helpful by the way, just wonder if us country folk without piped gas got forgotten about.
I dont think the gov have published anything about heating oil. They did say they would cap it for the same period but not a clue on what the figures will be as i dont think even the gov know at the moment
 
I believe its because they are using the ******** average house usage figures to work out the discount and to reduce it from the £3500 that was due in Oct to £2500 its based on x amount of kwh elec and x amount fo kwh gas and they worked the reduction from that. It's so retarded

I know but why would someone sit on a fixed term paying more when they can just switch (usually penalty free, at least same supplier) to the same cap as everyone else.

The best solution is no tariff pays more pwe kwh than the cap price at any time.
 
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