Big rise in city homes electric consumption
Concern over price increases
HOUSEHOLDS in Portsmouth recorded their largest rise in electricity consumption in eight years in 2020, figures show, as Covid forced people to spend more time at home.
The figures come at a time of rising energy prices, driven by a spike in the cost of gas, with energy bills predicted to double this year.
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy figures show 309 Gigawatt hours (GWh) of electricity were consumed by domestic meters in Portsmouth in 2020.
This was a four per cent rise on the 297 GWh consumed the year before and the largest change since comparable records began in 2012.
Across Great Britain electricity use by homes rose by 5.6 per cent in 2020, but while people spent more time at home, lockdowns forced many businesses to close, with non-domestic consumption dropping by 11.1 per cent.
It means overall electricity use dropped by 4.8 per cent – the largest year-on-year fall on record.
Fears have been raised about the soaring cost of energy bills – driven by
rising gas prices – as work from home advice has been reintroduced throughout the UK.
The disruption has been bankrupting suppliers since September, costing consumers £4bn.
TheNewslastyearjoineda national campaign run by its parent company JPIMedia to highlight rising costs, called
Keep Us Warm This Winter.
Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves is calling on the government to remove VAT on domestic gas and electricity bills through the winter months to help families weather the storm.
Labour said new figures from the House of Commons Library show that rising energy, food and other bills meant the Treasury is expected to have an extra £3.1 billion in VAT receipts this year, which they say it could use to fund the energy bill VAT cut.
However, the Government said VAT receipts were forecast to be below pre-Covid levels, with a loss of £2 billion compared to directly before the pandemic.
The business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng met with energy companies and regulator Ofgem after Christmas to discuss how to deal with soaring gas and electricity
prices.