Daily Express

Lives will be lost as rising energy bills hit millions

- By Giles Sheldrick Chief Reporter

BRITAIN’S brutal cost-of-living crisis will see OAPs suffer and die, the head of one of the country’s biggest power firms has predicted.

On the day every household was hit with sky-high charges, Bill Bullen, boss of Utilita Energy, warned the weak and vulnerable would inevitably perish.

Delivering the bleakest assessment of the worst standard of living emergency in a generation, Mr Bullen said there was “no question” price hikes would lead to the deaths of the elderly.

And he warned: “Next winter it will be much, much worse and much worse for children also.”

His devastatin­g verdict was delivered on what was dubbed April Cruel Day when every household in Britain was crippled by the sharpest jump in domestic energy bills in living memory.

Vulnerable

And in just five days National Insurance contributi­ons will also increase by 1.25 percentage points in a move that will see anybody earning more than £9,880 a year pay 1.25p more in the pound.

Families were stung after the price of gas and electricit­y soared by 54 per cent overnight as the industry regulator Ofgem raised the price cap for an average home to £1,971 from £1,277.

The Consumer Price Index measure of inflation now stands at 6.2 per cent – the highest since 1992. The raid on family finances has seen the cost of gas, electricit­y, food, water, mobile phone, broadband, council tax and car insurance all rocket.

And energy prices are almost certain to rise again in the autumn as the war in Ukraine exacerbate­s a global fuel crisis. It is expected households will have to fork out another £700 from October with utility bills set to soar to an eye-watering average of £2,700-a-year, crippling the least well off.

Age UK head Caroline Abrahams said: “What does the Government expect pensioners to do? Forgo their heating, ration their food or go into debt? “There’s no doubt it will lead to many more turning their heating

down or off altogether.” GMB General Secretary Gary Smith said: “Yesterday’s staggering price rises are the kick in the teeth so many have been dreading.

“We are a gas-producing nation with a world-class energy supply chain. But unlike so many countries, we do not have a cap on the gas we send overseas.

“That decision has left us vulnerable to rapid increases in internatio­nal energy prices.

“We urgently need a national energy strategy that progresses nuclear and hydrogen.”

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 ?? ?? Charities fear that poor pensioners will turn their heating off to save money while Bill Bullen, inset, fears some will perish
Charities fear that poor pensioners will turn their heating off to save money while Bill Bullen, inset, fears some will perish

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