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Rising fuel prices blight millions

Peter Reydt | 02.02.2008 20:25 | Social Struggles

There are many ways in which poverty affects people’s quality of life. One of these is the ability to keep warm. The recent hike in oil and gas prices has seen a sharp increase in what is termed fuel poverty in the UK. The consumer group Energywatch estimates that about 4.4 million are now affected by fuel poverty, amounting to one in six people in Britain.

People are deemed to live in fuel poverty when they need to spend more than 10 percent of their income to heat and light their house. However, this rough definition is only part of a more complex situation that also involves a number of deprivations. These include poor housing stock with bad insulation and inefficient heating systems, rising fuel prices and low incomes. Fuel poverty therefore provides a good indication for the general level of poverty in society.

Based on the figures of Ofgem, which regulates electricity and gas markets in the UK, the last time fuel poverty levels were as high was in 1999, a period affected by broad world economic turmoil. Figures then fell until about 2005, but started to rise in the following years.

For many, fuel poverty is a question of life and death. The sick, the disabled and older people on low incomes are especially affected. Every year, tens of thousands die because they cannot afford to adequately heat their homes. Some 93 percent of these so-called “excess” winter deaths occur among those over the age of 65. Last winter, there were an estimated 23,900 such deaths.

Fuel poverty cannot be regarded separately from the general rise in poverty. The recent turbulence on the world markets following the US credit crunch crisis is leading to a further increase in attacks on the living conditions of millions, as the major corporations and banks seek to offset their losses onto the backs of the working class. In addition, many small and medium-sized companies are facing severe difficulties, if not being driven to the wall. This will have a devastating impact on the lives of millions of workers, increasing poverty in general and fuel poverty in particular.

This general trend can be seen in the pricing policies of the six corporations that dominate the energy markets in Britain. The latest rise in fuel poverty is directly linked to a hike in prices by these major energy suppliers. Three have raised their prices significantly this year. British Gas, the UK’s biggest power provider, announced increases in gas and electricity bills of 15 percent. Npower raised its electricity prices by 12.7 percent and gas by 17.2 percent, and EDF Energy put up its electricity tariffs by 7.9 percent and gas bills by 12.9 percent. E.On, Scottish Power and Scottish & Southern Energy are expected to follow soon. These increases will inflate household energy bills by well over £100 a year, pushing the average yearly cost to more than £1,000. It is estimated that each 1 percent increase in energy bills sends 40,000 more households into fuel poverty.

At the same time, the energy companies are making massive profits. There are many indications that the recent price hikes are nothing but a shameless attempt by these corporations to line their pockets. They seek to justify the consumer price hikes by pointing to a rise in wholesale costs for oil and gas on the world markets. While the energy companies claim they are simply passing on these extra costs to the customer, at best this is only half the truth. According to consumer groups, the current rises faced by domestic customers are far above the increased wholesale costs faced by these corporations.

British energy suppliers are holding the working class to ransom. For example, EDF claimed that “wholesale gas prices had risen 117 percent since February last year, with electricity up 90 percent over the same time,” whereas Ofgem put these figures at 31 percent for gas and 40 percent for electricity.

Research sponsored jointly by UNISON, the public service trade union, and the National Right to Fuel Campaign found that the average household prices charged to customers had increased by £2.3 billion more than the costs of producing and selling the electricity and gas that was supplied. In other European countries, such as Germany and France, price rises have been on a far lower level, even falling in some cases.

Consumer groups are demanding the government order a Competition Commission investigation into whether there has been “tacit collusion” by the power suppliers that dominate the UK market. Allan Asher, chief executive of Energywatch, told BBC News 24 that the entire energy market should be reviewed by the Competition Commission. “The price rises we’ve seen are not justified,” he said, adding, “There’ll be more, but sadly the market is not working well and that’s leading to consumers paying much, much more than they need to.”

Following a meeting between Alistair Darling, the chancellor of the exchequer, and Ofgem last week, a spokesman said the chancellor was “not minded” to call for an inquiry after “he had been reassured the market was working properly.”

This response reflects the contemptuous attitude of the government to the problem of fuel poverty. In 2001, the government announced a target to eradicate fuel poverty for all vulnerable and low-income households by 2010 and all other households by 2016. But in practice, it was adding to the problem by raising VAT (value-added tax) on consumer bills. A research commissioned by the Energy Efficiency Partnership for Homes—a group of 700 industry bodies concerned with domestic energy efficiency—pointed out that electricity prices surged by 39 percent and gas prices by 61 percent between 2003 and 2006.

The eradication of fuel poverty and poverty as a whole is only possible through ending the domination of society by the transnational corporations, including the energy companies. The economy must be organised not for the profit of a few but to meet the needs of all; bringing the utility companies under the democratic control of the working class to guarantee that every household receives the basic necessities of heat and light.

Peter Reydt
- Homepage: http://www.wsws.org/

Comments

Hide the following 8 comments

You ain't seen nothing yet...

02.02.2008 21:14

This is going to get a LOT worse, conventional crude oil production has peaked (increases since 2005 have been due to counting all 'liquids' which includes liquid fuel from coal, oil sands, crops etc), gas is going to peak soon as well and coal could peak as soon as 2025. In addition in the absence of radical social change global warming will be used to make the poor poorer via carbon taxes...

Chris


quite extraordinary

03.02.2008 11:57

that you can write all the above without once mentioning the desperate need for massive energy saving measures, that easily extracted fossil fuels are running out and that the global climate is being wrecked by burning said fossil fuels. which century are you living in? the easy times are over. get used to it. wake up everyone and stop thinking we all have some god given right to prance about our apallingly insulated homes in skimpy clothes like we've become used to.

marcel


amazing

03.02.2008 14:20

It's remarkable to think that despite everything that has been written there are still some individuals doing the work of the oil companies for them by trotting out the line of "Peak Oil"

ho hum


Peak Oil?

03.02.2008 14:28

I thought that this concept was the intellectual property of the BNP? If i'm wrong please educate me!

hum ho


Confusing reactions?

03.02.2008 17:59

And I only think the reactions are confusing because it is quite confusing, as soon as you bring peak oil into it and look at motives. Who does the concept of peak oil benefit? The energy companies, who will have an excuse to raise prices, or the activists who are arguing for sustainable energy/energy reduction schemes, or the people deciding to head for alternative lives in the hills, or those political parties who seek power by scaring people?

All of them, maybe. Which sadly doesn't make peak oil untrue. I don't know if it is or not.

But I think it's interesting that the article claims the UK is suffering disproportionately. I'd have liked to have seen the comparative facts about energy costs elsewhere in Europe. I also think it's interesting that UK energy companies seem to have been caught out lying about wholesale costs (again, more references please). Both would suggest that peak oil, whatever the truth of it, is not a factor in the deaths of thousands of old and vulnerable people, at all, in fact.

A


hum ho: do some research...

03.02.2008 21:32

The BNP doesn't take Peak Oil seriously, yes they do have a section of their web site dedicated to it but it does not appear to impact any of their policies (well to the extent that I have looked at their policies... which is not that much.. ;-).

Global conventional crude production peaked in 2005, the global liquid fuel production for January 2008 is the highest ever but this is because of the coal to liquid, food to liquid, tar sands to fuel and other non-conventional liquid fuel production.

Want to see a film about peak oil? A Crude Awakening / The Oil Crash,  http://www.oilcrashmovie.com/ is OK (not perfect of course...), it has been shown at some independent cinemas in the UK, you can get it via bittorrent...

Want to read a book? The Last Oil Shock,  http://lastoilshock.com/ by David Strahan is good (but I don't agree with him on things like nuclear power...), order it from your local library...

Want to chat with people about peak oil then try the Power Switch site:  http://powerswitch.org.uk/

Of course there are lots of other resources out there, the most positive film is The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil,  http://www.powerofcommunity.org/cm/index.php again you can get it via bittorrent. There is a good article about it here:  http://globalpublicmedia.com/the_power_of_community_how_cuba_survived_peak_oil

Richard Heinberg's material is well worth looking at:  http://globalpublicmedia.com/people/richard_heinberg

There is lots of information out there -- do some research, peak gas is not far away and peak coal could be as soon as 2025.

Chris


world oil reserves

04.02.2008 08:24

Perhaps those who claim that Peak Oil is either here or very close might like to consider the following.

Overall oil reserve figures based on found and exploitable wells were published in an open public way up until 1993 however then the US government stopped the US returns when the new Gulf and Texas fields were shown to have had about 50 times more oil than first thought. Since then it is generaly accepted that the great Louisiana field discovered in 1996 probably has the equivilent of what is in Lybia.

The World Oil Forum has pushed the US government for years to relase the real figures but the major oil companies now get around this by declaring fields to be "theoretical and non proven" so they are not included in true reserves.

Prof Robert Engler made a number of calculations based on exploration - sucess ratios and an assumption of oil demand doubling by 2012 and calculated that current reserves both declared and undeclared equate to nearly 300 years worth however the crucial thing is that for the final 140 years almost 100% of the world's oil will come from either Saudi Arabia or North America. In 2005 Exxon CEO Lee Raymond was said to have called these figures, "about right".

None of this takes into account non found fields, the Artic region for example probably has more oil under it than the entire current fields already found but the challenges of getting it are formidible. The world is a long way from Peak Oil, I'm not saying we just carry on using it like we do now just that we need to understand that Peak Oil is a device used by oil companies to push up prices, synthetic oil is being developed for one simple reason, cost. Technological developments now mean that at $100 a barrel crude is potentialy more expensive than semi-synthetic fuels.

Once again economic drive change




oil info


Energy Prices, Inflation and Denial

04.02.2008 10:55

Some interesting articles on the UK energy situation:

Energy Prices, Inflation and Denial
 http://europe.theoildrum.com/node/3584

New Nuclear Reactors For The UK: Is This Really A Good Idea?
 http://europe.theoildrum.com/node/3450

Daddy, will the lights be on at Christmas?
... or is Europe running low on natural gas?
 http://europe.theoildrum.com/node/3401

Chris