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Scottish Power increases gas prices by 34%

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Published Date: 29 August 2008
SCOTTISH Power today announced it was increasing gas prices by an average 34% and electricity prices by 9%.
The company, which has 5.2 million customers, blamed soaring coal and wholesale gas costs for the increases, which will take effect from Monday.

It said the average dual fuel customer would see bills increasing by 25%.

Scottish Power said the wholesale cost of gas had risen 65% since February, while the price of coal had increased by 45% in the same period.

It said about 1.2 million customers were currently protected by fixed– price tariffs. The company today offered a new tariff guaranteeing prices until December 2009.

The firm is the latest to hit households with steep hikes in gas and electricity prices in recent weeks, following moves by British Gas, EDF, E.On and Scottish & Southern Energy.

Willie MacDiarmid, Scottish Power's director of energy retail, said: "These are difficult times and we understand the financial impact this announcement will have on our customers.

"Although we're one of the last companies to announce increases, we're sorry we couldn't hold on any longer. However, we have worked very hard to protect people for as long as possible from these considerable increases in the wholesale market.

"We have tried hard to keep electricity prices as low as possible and our increase of 9% is the lowest in the sector.

"The continuing volatility in the global market for gas is directly contributing to increasing UK's domestic energy prices and Scottish Power is not immune to these rises."

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  • Last Updated: 29 August 2008 3:23 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scotland's economy
 
1

Saoghal Beag,

29/08/2008 15:51:45
The only protection is to be on a local network with local renewable generation. Free from the vaguries of the oil market and free from the cartel run byt the limited number of suppliers.
2

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 29/08/2008 17:39:28
If your gas boiler is coming to the end of its useful life there's one obvious answer - no more gas. Its sources are becoming more volatile and if Russia is one of the main suppliers they have an unhealthy tendency to switch off if it doesn't suit them.

My next boiler - wood pellet.
3

Active Sassenach,

Luton, England 29/08/2008 21:04:13
Are you having fuel poverty up there in Scotland? Every time someone announces a fuel price rise down here in England, a group of Labour back benchers threaten to defeat the non-government of Maggie Broon because a growing section of the population is forced to spend more than 10% of its net income on fuel - which to us is fuel poverty.

All three posts #1, #2 and #3 are bang on the money. I am surprised that only 3 people in Scotland are concerned about this. So I assume Alex Salmond has a plan that satisfies everyone to ensure nobody freezes to death.

Wood pellets don't come out of the North Sea. So Alex Salmond will have to include them in his tax plans if you want to be independent. So I suspect there will be no hiding place in the end!
4

radge dug,

Dùn Eideann 29/08/2008 21:22:08
#4 - do you mean 'Sasannach'?

Is this one of the 'union dividends'? Hopefully another nail in the coffin of the outdated 'union'. Can Scottish control over her own substantianal natural resources be a bad thing?

Seachd searbh sgith de amaideas an 'Aonaidh'. Saor Alba.
5

mike3,

Midlands 07/09/2008 08:51:44
Think nuclear.

 

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