The Scottish Mail on Sunday

The REAL villain behind your surging electricit­y bill

-

I FEEL sorry for British Gas, attacked for raising the price of electricit­y. I still find it confusing a gas company sells electricit­y, but the facts are quite simple.

British Gas and the other power companies are raising charges because we have a mad Government. Under New Labour’s unhinged Climate Change Act, backed by the Tories and virtually unopposed in Parliament, we are steering straight into an iceberg. Perfectly good coal-fired power stations all over the country are being shut down and blown up so they can’t be reopened, because of crazed Green regulation­s.

In some cases, they are being converted to burning wood chips imported from the USA. If this did any good (which is, er, unproven) it would be immediatel­y cancelled out by the huge number of new coal-fired power stations recently built in India and China. Our nuclear generators are slowly dying. Plans to replace them are hopelessly behind. The Government assumed that the growing gap between what we use and what we generate would be met by new gas-fired stations, but nobody has built them.

So instead, it hopes to meet the need with French nuclear electricit­y brought under the Channel, which we can’t rely on if the French need it more; and on power generated by wind, which doesn’t blow all the time, and sun which doesn’t shine all the time.

And it is the cost of subsidisin­g the sun and wind power which is forcing up electricit­y prices. So is the need to link remote windmills expensivel­y to the grid. There’s also the cost of setting up special parks of diesel generators to prevent power cuts if all else fails. Diesel? Yes, the devilish fuel we’re trying to drive off the roads could be what saves you from a Christmas blackout.

Currently, the Green levy, the main reason for the latest price rise, makes up at least £73 of an average £562 annual electricit­y bill. It’s going to go up a lot more. I think the power companies should put this on their bills in big letters. Then Parliament might be forced to rethink its mad warmist dogma, and follow a sane power policy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom