The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Report warns one in 10 unable to pay fuel bill due to lack of money

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One in 10 workers in Scotland was unable to pay a gas or electricit­y bill at least once last year due to a lack of money, a report found.

Citizens Advice Scotland (Cas) said 101 respondent­s from 1,009 people surveyed said they had run out of money before pay day in the last 12 months.

The poll, conducted for Cas by YouGov, found 7% of respondent­s had run out of money once or twice while 2% had done so “more than six times”.

Renewed definition­s of fuel poverty last month revealed 583,000 Scottish households are in fuel poverty while 293,000 are in “extreme” fuel poverty.

Jamie Stewart, Cas energy spokesman, said: “The Citizens Advice network in Scotland helps hundreds of thousands of people each year and for thousands of our clients, fuel poverty and soaring energy bills is a source of stress and anxiety.

“Far too many people who are in employment are not earning enough to enable them to pay to heat their homes.

“Fuel bills continue to squeeze household budgets, even for working people. The current energy market is not working for consumers, and both the government and the energy companies need to focus their efforts on making sure that targeted help is available to those who need it.

“To counter fuel poverty and ever rising energy bills, we need a multi-faceted approach from policy makers, government and industry.”

Fuel poverty is defined as a household spending 10% of its net income on fuel costs after housing, care and childcare costs – while extreme fuel poverty is defined as 20% and over.

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