The Scotsman

Highlands are paying too high a price for energy

- Kirsty Morrison

As inflation rises beyond six per cent, the soaring cost of living is becoming a real crisis. Many of our tenants at Albyn Housing Society were last week looking for Chancellor Rishi Sunak to use his Spring Statement to announce measures to reduce living costs rather than installing a price cap that keeps energy prices at rates that some people already cannot pay.

Albyn Housing Society owns and manages 3700 properties in 70 communitie­s across the Highlands. Hundreds of our customers are struggling with energy costs, fuel and food leading to unpreceden­ted rising living costs across the board. While we welcome any support with these costs, the Spring Statement does little to help our tenants in

Highland communitie­s, many of whom live on low incomes.

It could be tempting to assume that everyone is facing these rising costs equally or, to quote the former chancellor George Osborne, “We are all in this together”. However, that simply is not the case, as many residents in the north of Scotland, who are effectivel­y paying the equivalent of a Highland Energy Tax, will testify.

The irony is that the Highland region produces the largest amount of renewable and convention­al energy per head of population in the UK. Our tenants can just about see this energy being produced from their doorsteps through renewables and convention­al oil and gas production. Despite that, residents here pay the highest energy costs per unit in the UK, up to 4p per unit more and with cooler temperatur­es, this energy is often needed more to heat and power homes. Most of the area we cover is not connected to gas supplies so our tenants have limited energy choices, which are often more expensive, including electric or oil systems.

At Albyn Housing we are being proactive in our approach to the energy crisis and we are

working closely with Cairn Housing to develop joint approaches and initiative­s across the region in the coming months. However, we have limited resources and funding, with many of our tenants seeking support. We have allocated funds, but with so many tenants in desperate need, this will not stretch as far as is necessary.

Following this disappoint­ing Spring Statement and given the cost of living crisis which is putting so many of our tenants at risk, we have created a five point action plan to help our residents. First, we are calling on both Scottish and UK government­s to prohibit energy companies from disconnect­ing electricit­y supplies due to non-payment of bills - at least until energy prices in the market stabilise.

Many of our tenants are clamouring for informatio­n on how to heat and power their homes most efficientl­y. Government­s urgently need to provide either the staff or the finances to provide resources for extra energy advice and support within the home. Both these interventi­ons would help residents across the country.

Closer to home, we must also ensure Highland communitie­s are not discrimina­ted against. We therefore want an urgent review into Scottish Government grant allocation­s and its criteria. Given the fact that rural communitie­s are more geographic­ally dispersed, we do not meet the community grant criteria, despite our services covering up to 70 communitie­s and villages. Kirsty Morrison is interim CEO of Albyn Housing Society, an organisati­on that manages more than 3,700 properties in 70 communitie­s across the Highlands.

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Fuel Poverty is rife in Scotland

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