Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

GRAHAM HISCOTT Rap for sneaky energy giants Big suppliers ‘keeping cheap deals quiet’

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is A forest-based holiday firm branching out after bagging

Private £50million of fresh investment. snapped-up a equity firm Phoenix has

Holidays, which controllin­g stake in Forest

UK. has nine sites across the will allow it to Bosses say the extra funds sites by 2022 as open at least another five

Brits it seeks to cash in on more opting to holiday at home.

The firm’s other big investors are the Forestry Commission and LDC, the private equity arm of Lloyds Banking Group. MPS yesterday accused energy giants of fattening their profits by not telling customers about cheaper deals.

During a fiery hearing at Westminste­r, bosses of three of the biggest suppliers admitted they contacted customers on rip-off standard variable tariffs (SVR) as little as four times a year in some cases. Meanwhile, smaller supplier First Utility gets in touch 13 times a year.

Labour’s Rachel Reeves, head of the Commons Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee, tore into British Gas which has more than two thirds of its customers on costly standard tariffs – 43% of them for more than three years. Sarwjit Sambhi, managing director of Centrica’s home unit which includes British Gas, claimed: “I don’t think customers would appreciate being contacted 13 times a year.” But Reeves snapped: “You are quite happy to have 69% of your customers on standard variable tariffs because that is where you make your profit.”

British Gas last month pledged to scrap SVRS, but only for its new customers.

The hearing took evidence from Centrica, E.ON, SSE and First Utility on Government proposals to cap SVRS. Sambhi admitted the move would dent its profits.

Labour MP Peter Kyle also slammed suppliers for charging SVR customers more than those on fixed-price deals, asking: “Why should customers who get the same product in the same way pay £200 a year difference a year?” He also accused suppliers of “profiting on the back of vulnerable customers”, as older and poorer households were less likely to use comparison sites and switch. Stephen Forbes, chief commercial officer at SSE, insisted a rise in switching rates and the existence of 60 suppliers meant “competitio­n is working”.

Alex Neill from consumer group Which? said: “All energy suppliers must do more to tackle unfair deals. “And the very least they can do is communicat­e clearly and consistent­ly with their customers about better deals.”

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