fixed rate gas bills
March 8, 2008 by credit4everyone
Filed under bills
Discounted Energy
• Save Money
3% cheaper than ScottishPower’s standard monthly Direct Debit prices for gas and electricity* NB: At launch, this equates to an average saving of £25 per annum on Dual Fuel**
• Guarantee Period
Your prices will remain 3% below ScottishPower’s standard monthly Direct Debit prices until July 2009.
• Convenience
Customers who take gas and electricity from us will receive one combined bill and our Gas & Electricity Offer discount of up to £16.80 per annum (inc. VAT).
• Online Option
Save an additional £15.75 per annum (inc VAT) for Dual Fuel customers by choosing to manage your energy account online or £10.50 per annum (inc VAT) for Electricity Solus customers.
Fixed Price
• No PRICE RISES until March 2011
Your customers can look forward with added confidence to the security of fixed prices until 28th February 2011 with our Fixed Price Energy Offer. Convenience - Customers who take gas and electricity from ScottishPower will receive one combined bill and our Gas & Electricity Offer discount of up to £16.80* per annum (incl. VAT).
*The gas and electricity offer annual discount of £16.80 inc VAT is available in ScottishPower and Manweb former host public electricity supply areas for dual fuel customers paying monthly by direct debit. All other customers who qualify for the discount will receive an annual discount of £10.50 inc VAT
Online Option
Save an additional £15.75 per annum (inc VAT) for Dual Fuel customers by choosing to manage your energy account online or £10.50 per annum (inc VAT) for electricity Solus customers.
* Based on the kWh rate comparison between ScottishPower’s standard monthly Direct Debit prices and ScottishPower’s Discounted Energy Offer. **** Saving shown based on comparison between ScottishPower’s Standard average domestic Dual Fuel bill and ScottishPower’s Discounted Energy Offer Dual Fuel bill for a customer supplied on Standard Rate electricity using 3,300kWh and 20,500kWh of mains gas each year who pays monthly by Direct Debit. Based on an average Dual Fuel bill across.
scottish power increase prices
February 3, 2008 by credit4everyone
Filed under news
Scottish Power have followed British Gas, N Power and EDF by announcing an increase to their Gas and Electricity. Gas bills will rise by around 15% on average and Electricity by 14 the company said.
Scottish Power which has 5.2 million customers blamed higher wholesale gas prices. Customers on dual fuel faced an 14.8% increase, however, 1.2 million customers on fixed price deals will not see an increase.
Rivals British Gas - the UK’s biggest power provider - increased gas and electricity prices by 15% in January.
The same month, Npower raised its electricity prices by 12.7% and gas by 17.2% and EDF Energy also put up its electricity tariffs by 7.9% and gas bills by 12.9%..
EON are now expected to follow suit, meanwhile, Southern and Scottish Energy have promised not to follow until the end of next month.
Saving money on utility bills
January 7, 2008 by credit4everyone
Filed under bills
NEW YEAR MISERY FOR CONSUMERS – NPOWER THE FIRST TO PUT HOUSEHOLD ENERGY BILLS UP
- npower is putting its prices up by an average of 17.2% or £92 for gas and 12.7% or £48 for electricity from tomorrow, 5th January[1]
- Increases on standard tariffs will affect over two thirds of its 6.8 million customer accounts[2]
- Average household bill for a dual fuel npower customer will now go up from £908 to £1,047[3] – £18 more expensive than when prices were at a peak last year[4]
- npower is now the most expensive supplier in the market – on average it is 15% more expensive than competitors[5]
- 15 price rises made by suppliers in 2006 added £4.8 billion to consumer energy bills, price cuts in 2007 only shaved off £1.7 billion[6].
Britain’s fourth largest energy supplier, npower, has today announced that it is putting up prices from tomorrow, 5th January, 2008. The increases – an average of 17.2% or £92 for gas and 12.7% or £48 for electricity[1] – will hit its standard tariffs, affecting almost 4.9 million customer accounts[2]. It will add an extra £139 on to the average standard dual fuel customer’s household energy bill, which is now set to rise from £908 to £1,047[3].The New Year price hike wipes out the £121 (12%)[7] price cut that npower made last year. It means that customers only enjoyed lower prices for 8 months[7], mainly during the summer period when energy usage is lower. Prior to this, in 2006, npower increased prices by £358 or 53%[8].The price rise blow comes only a month after npower put up the prices on its wholesale tracker plan by 17% for gas and 13% for electricity[9] and by 17% on its new online energy plan[10]. However, customers will be dismayed as, at its last full year results, RWE npower reported bumper profits of Euro 658 million[11]. It has also spent just over £12 million on advertising this year - only British Gas and E.ON spent more[12].Suppliers will, however, find it difficult to justify sweeping price rises to customers whose perception is that energy companies are slow to pass on price cuts, but quick to put prices up. Energy prices soared across the board by £277 (38%) on average between 1st January 2006 and 1st January 2007, but prices were only cut by £101 during 2007[13], despite a 56% decrease in wholesale energy prices[14]. While 15 price rises in 2006 added £4.8 billion to consumer energy bills, price cuts in 2007 only shaved off £1.7 billion[6].
Today’s move gives other providers the green light to put prices up too and household energy bills are now expected to top £1,000 again in 2008. Suppliers will follow npower’s lead and point to increased wholesale energy costs, as well as an increase in other costs, such as distribution, transmission, the Renewables Obligation and the introduction of the Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT). These additional costs alone could be responsible for an additional £40 being added to household energy bills in 2008 [15].
Tim Wolfenden, Head of Home Services at uSwitch.com, comments: “The prospect of being able to raise prices has had suppliers champing at the bit, so it was always just a matter of time before one of them made the move. By announcing price increases today, npower has given the other suppliers the green flag they’ve been waiting for. The coast is now clear for a general price hike and energy bills can be expected to top £1,000 again - consumers are going to be in for a rough ride this year.
“The good news is that npower has softened the blow for its pre-payment customers. But, by being the first supplier to put prices up, npower is skating on very thin ice. Its reputation for customer service has taken a real nose dive over the last year – our latest independent Customer Satisfaction Report shows that consumers now rate it only marginally better than British Gas[16], which is not a good place to be. Today’s move will simply alienate customers further”.
“The price increase kicks-in tomorrow on 5th January. Customers have to switch now to reduce the impact of higher energy bills on their household. By not switching, consumers could waste over £2.3 billion in total or £334 each[17]. Those who have never switched before and are sitting on an uncompetitive standard plan have the most to gain and should switch straight away. The only consumers who can afford to sit back and wait to see how this round of price increases plays out are those who are already on a competitive online deal.”
| Supplier |
Standard Plan (paying on receipt of bill) |
Online Plan (paying by Monthly Direct Debit) |
| npower |
£1,047 |
£901 |
| ScottishPower |
£958 |
£770 |
| E.ON |
£913 |
£769 |
| British Gas |
£912 |
£742 |
| EDF Energy |
£907 |
£819 |
| Scottish & Southern Energy |
£875 |
£777 |
| Average |
£935 |
£796 |
Based on a dual fuel medium user consuming 3,300kWh electricity and 20,500kWh gas with bill sizes averaged across all regions. EDF Online Dual Fuel Plan is only availible in 10 of 14 PES regions. For Scottish and Southern Energy, the online bill size used is for their online plan available through Atlantic Electric and Gas, which is part of Scottish and Southern Energy.

