The Guardian Australia

Treasury sets aside up to £1.7bn to cover Bulb’s winter running costs after collapse

- Jillian Ambrose Energy correspond­ent

The Treasury has set aside up to £1.7bn to cover the cost of running Bulb Energy through a special administra­tor this winter after the supplier’s collapse on Monday.

Britain’s seventh-largest supplier has become the first energy company to be put forward for a “special administra­tion” process so it can continue to provide gas and electricit­y to its 1.7 million customers through the winter after going bust on Monday.

The energy regulator, Ofgem, proposed to the courts that the global advisory firm Teneo take over the running of Bulb while the fate of its customers is decided. The administra­tor is expected to have access to up to £1.7bn in public money to cover the cost of supplying homes with energy during the energy market crisis.

Kwasi Kwarteng, the business secretary, told MPs in the House of Commons that the new regime was a temporary arrangemen­t, “which provides an ultimate safety net to protect consumers and ensure continued supply”.

“We do not want this company to be in this temporary state longer than is absolutely necessary,” he added.

Energy industry sources believe it could take “somewhere between six weeks and six months” for the fallout of the Bulb collapse to be resolved by the administra­tor and a team of banks, which are due to be appointed in the coming weeks.

Ofgem urged Bulb customers not to worry and said they would “see no disruption to their supply, their price plan will remain the same and any outstandin­g credit balances, including money owed to customers who have recently switched, will be honoured”.

The provision for a special energy supplier administra­tor was first set in legislatio­n in 2011 but has never been used, in part because previous supplier collapses have been small enough in scale to find a new buyer relatively quickly.

Bulb is by far the largest energy supplier to go bust after a string of more than 20 company collapses since September. The cost of running the company through the winter, to be shouldered by the Treasury, may run into hundreds of millions of pounds for UK taxpayers. The administra­tion could also lead to higher energy bills if parts of these costs are shared across the energy market.

In total the cost of managing the impact of the energy market crunch on failed energy suppliers could run to about £2bn this winter, according to the Investec analyst Martin Young. But the final tally remained unknown as “Bulb’s failure takes us into uncharted waters”, he said.

Staff and customers were told by Bulb on Monday that the company had made the “difficult decision” to agree to a special administra­tion process after its plans to raise more funds were scuppered by the energy crisis.

The company was in dire need of fresh funds as debt repayments loomed but investors were understood to be wary of backing energy companies amid record high gas and electricit­y market prices, and may have been unconvince­d by Bulb’s recent performanc­e.

A spokespers­on for the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy said: “The special administra­tion regime is a longstandi­ng, wellestabl­ished mechanism to protect energy consumers and ensure continued energy supply when a supplier fails.”

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