{"id":222037,"date":"2023-09-06T16:12:41","date_gmt":"2023-09-06T16:12:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/allworldreport.com\/?p=222037"},"modified":"2023-09-06T16:12:41","modified_gmt":"2023-09-06T16:12:41","slug":"centrica-boss-faces-awkward-question-as-energy-giants-are-quizzed","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/allworldreport.com\/world-news\/centrica-boss-faces-awkward-question-as-energy-giants-are-quizzed\/","title":{"rendered":"Centrica boss faces awkward question as energy giants are quizzed"},"content":{"rendered":"
Energy giants have been quizzed about \u2018how they sleep at night\u2019 as profits surge while thousand die from the cold.<\/p>\n
MPs yesterday condemned \u2018horrifying\u2019 figures showing there were some 4,706 \u2018excess deaths\u2019 last winter against the background of punishing energy bills.<\/p>\n
Charities have warned that thousands more will die early this coming winter from conditions made worse by cold and damp homes.<\/p>\n
MPs investigating the government\u2019s preparations for winter today heard harrowing evidence of people resorting to \u2018dangerous coping measures\u2019.<\/p>\n
These ranged from not washing children\u2019s clothes to not taking hot showers and using to barbecues to produce a hot meal.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Centrica chief executive Chris O’Shea (pictured) was asked by Conservative MP Vicky Ford: ‘Chris, how do you sleep at night?’<\/p>\n
British Gas, reported a record figure of \u00a3969m for the first six months of 2023 \u2013 a nine-fold increase on the \u00a398m in the same period last year.<\/p>\n
A small fall in energy bills \u2013 worth around \u00a33.50 a week on average \u2013 is due to come into effect on October 1, however this is expected to be reversed in January.<\/p>\n
Simon Francis, co-ordinator at the End Fuel Poverty Coalition, told the Commons Energy Security and Net Zero Committee, warned of more deaths, saying: \u2018The signs are that people are going to be struggling more in cold, damp homes this winter.\u2019<\/p>\n
Chief executive at National Energy Action, Adam Scorer, said customers are weighed down with \u2018impossible levels of debt\u2019 to their suppliers.<\/p>\n
He said there was evidence of privation, with people switching to \u2018a panoply of dangerous coping mechanisms\u2019, which will be worse this winter.<\/p>\n
Looking ahead, he warned: \u2018People will expect they will not wash clothes for their children, they will expect not to have hot showers or baths, not to heat their homes, to use barbecues to cook their food.\u2019<\/p>\n
A member of the committee, the Conservative MP Vicky Ford, described the warnings as \u2018horrifying\u2019.<\/p>\n
Her comments came during questioning of senior executives at the energy firms British Gas, Octopus, EDF and E.On.<\/p>\n
She said: \u2018A lot of you listened to the previous panel, and that was horrifying. 4,700 deaths, dangerous coping mechanisms, people not washing their children’s clothes, not using their ovens, risking their lives with barbecues.<\/p>\n
\u2018In the meantime, a lot of you have been making an awful, awful, awful lot of money \u2013 a nine times profit increase.\u2019<\/p>\n
Speaking to the chief executive of Centrica, which owns British Gas, Chris O’Shea, the MP asked: \u2018Chris, how do you sleep at night?\u2019<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Conservative MP Vicky Ford (pictured) said energy bosses had been making an ‘awful, awful, awful lot of money’ as customers suffered\u00a0<\/p>\n
Mr O’Shea replied: \u2018So our profits increased at British Gas this year, as you say, quite substantially, the vast majority of that is the recovery of past costs.\u2019<\/p>\n
He said the increase was designed to off-set substantial costs due to wholesale energy price rises caused by Russia\u2019s invasion of Ukraine.<\/p>\n
His evidence was halted by Ms Ford who said: \u2018Stop. People are dying.<\/p>\n
\u2018People are being driven to situations to kill themselves last winter because of the one-off crisis that happened for the first time that winter, because of Ukraine, and we think it may happen again – even worse.\u2019<\/p>\n
Mr O\u2019Shea said the company has committed to boost support to struggling customers with a contribution equal to 10 per cent of British Gas profits.<\/p>\n
He said companies are making a modest profit margin of 2 per cent and argued that energy bills are just one factor in a wider problem.<\/p>\n
\u2018There are a substantial number of people in the UK that cannot afford to live with dignity. Whether its rent, mortgage, food, energy,\u2019 he said.<\/p>\n
\u2018Energy companies are permitted to make 2 per cent margin, that’s half the margin that supermarkets make, that’s a lot less than other regulated businesses. We are part of a bigger issue.\u2019<\/p>\n
Giving evidence, the head of energy at Citizens Advice, Gillian Cooper, argued for the introduction of a social tariff for the poorest households, which would guarantee lower prices for heat and light.<\/p>\n