Yorkshire Post

No excuses says E.ON chief as energy giant to pay £12m penalty for mis-selling

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THE chief executive of energy firm E.ON has admitted it was “completely unacceptab­le” that staff became embroiled in the latest mis-selling scandal after his company was ordered to pay £12m to vulnerable customers.

The German-owned business has become the latest of the Big Six energy firms to be punished for mis-selling and also faces a bill of between £3m and £8m for compensati­ng those affected by the poor sales practices.

The company has asked 465,000 people to contact it because it believes they may have received the wrong informatio­n when choosing their energy tariff. The average payment to those affected is likely to be around £67.

Regulator Ofgem said E.ON failed to properly train and monitor its staff and those it employed through third-party telesales agencies, leading to incorrect informatio­n being provided to cus- tomers on the doorstep and over the phone.

Some of the breaches continued until last December, despite earlier pledges from E.ON that it would make changes and improvemen­ts to its processes.

E.ON UK chief executive Tony Cocker saw his bonus cut by 26 per cent last year as a result of the failings but has said he won’t resign.

Mr Cocker said that as part of overhaulin­g its sales operations the company had ended face-toface sales and outbound residentia­l telephone cold calling.

He added: “It is completely unacceptab­le that we may have been unclear with customers about their tariff choices.

“There was no organised attempt to mislead, and Ofgem has acknowledg­ed this, but that does not excuse the fact we did not have in place enough rules, checks and oversight.”

Rather than pay the penalty to the Treasury, E.ON will hand around £35 to 333,000 of its customers who are normally recipients of the Warm Home Discount.

Energy Secretary Ed Davey said: “It’s right that if energy companies aren’t fair to their customers, then they’re penalised – and their customers benefit.”

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