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Energy prices start to rise!

Neil Faulkner
by Lovemoney Staff Neil Faulkner on 13 January 2010  |  Comments 13 comments

The first letters have hit customers advising of price increases. Now seems a good time to compare fixed gas and electricity deals with variable ones.

In 2006 we had huge price increases to gas and electricity tariffs. In 2007 we had a small decrease, then in 2008 we saw massive increases, and 2009 there were a dozen tiny cuts. Anyone notice a pattern here?

Who knows whether this will continue for 2010? However, we know that suppliers have many reasons coming up to raise prices. The cost of new infrastructure and additional green-energy investment alone will be huge.

What's more, we have today the first warning. One lovemoney.com reader has just received a letter from EDF saying his tariff price is going up in mere days. Within the first two weeks of the year we may already be at a turning point in pricing!

This means that if we can find a good deal on fixed tariffs it wouldn't be a stupid idea to go for it. Let's take a look at how they compare:

Cheapest tariffs (medium usage in Farnborough)

Tariff

Tariff type

Cost

Difference

Compared to BG's standard tariff

npower Sign Online v17

Variable

£904

N/A

23% cheaper

ScottishPower Online Energy Saver v8

Variable

£921

2% dearer

21% cheaper

Ovo Energy New Energy v2

Fixed for 12 months

£927

3% dearer

21% cheaper

E.ON Fix Online v5

Fixed till end Feb 2011

£935

3% dearer

20% cheaper

Atlantic Online Fixed Price

Fixed till end March 2011

£940

4% dearer

20% cheaper

I've rounded to the nearest pound.

An average household could pay around £900 with the cheapest variable tariff from npower, provided it doesn't go up in price. (Note that the cheapest tariffs are very rarely reduced in price for existing customers.)

In my table are the two cheapest variable and three cheapest fixed tariffs. Take a quick look at the last column. You'll see that all of them are at least 20% cheaper than British Gas' standard tariff, which millions of homeowners are on.

More on each tariff

npower's Sign Online version 17 is the cheapest and it's variable, costing an estimated £904. If you leave before 31/03/11, you'll pay a £40 exit fee. Furthermore, if you leave within the first year you lose £105 of cashback, which would make it much more expensive than the price shown. These are hefty penalties! Also, for the first time, npower will still penalise you if you're switching to another of its tariffs.

ScottishPower's Online Energy Saver version eight is the second cheapest and it's also variable, charging £921 (unless the price rises). If you switch away before 01/12/10 you must pay a £50 exit fee. I think these lower early-exit costs make it more attractive than npower.

Ovo Energy's New Energy version two is fixed for 12 months and costs £927. That's just £23 more than npower's variable tariff. The exit penalty is £60, which you pay if you leave before the 12 months is up. This is the cheapest fix by £8. A possible disadvantage is that Ovo's future is not yet certain; most start-ups don't last long in the energy world.

E.ON's Fix Online version five is fixed for more than 12 months, provided you switch this week. (It can take up to four weeks for any switch to take effect. You'll experience no downtime on services in between.) It costs just £31 more than npower's variable tariff. You'll pay a relatively small fee of £30 if you leave before the fix expires.

Atlantic Online Fixed Price is the third cheapest fix, and it's the longest fix available (excluding two extremely expensive ones). It's fixed till 31/03/11 and costs £940, which is £36 more than npower's variable tariff. It's notable as it's the only fix to take you through the whole of next winter. Exit penalties are not as harsh as npower's but they're still heavy. You'll pay a fee of £75 if you leave before 31/08/10 and £35 if you leave between then and 31/03/11. In addition, you'll lose your 8.5% cashback (£80ish) if you leave inside 12 months.

Choosing a tariff

Prices are not guaranteed to rise. It may be that going for a fixed deal won't work out, but I think it's highly unlikely that prices will fall dramatically this year. Consider that in the past year or more there's been a lot of pressure on energy companies to lower prices and we've still just had small cuts. The greatest risk appears to be to the upside.

On balance, I think I like E'ON's fix best for the combination of a good deal over 12 months and low exit penalties, but the tariff you choose depends on your feelings about risk.

Do your research

The above figures are just examples based on a medium-user in Farnborough, Hampshire. The tariffs available to you, and their cost, will vary depending on both where you live and the amount of energy you use, so you should collect your bills together and do your own tariff comparison.

We have a help button in our comparison tables that helps you to estimate your usage. However, it's much better if you can read how much you use from your own bills.

Before switching, remember to check the exit fees and penalties on your existing tariff.

Compare gas and electricity tariffs at lovemoney.com

Top tips to cut your energy bills

If you want to cut your energy costs, lovemoney.com can help. First, adopt this goal: Cut your gas and electric bill. Next, watch this video on energy tariffs. Then, why not have a wander over to Q&A and ask other lovemoney.com members for their tips on how to cut energy costs?

Finally, remember you can save hundreds by switching energy tariff through lovemoney.com.

More: 25 extraordinary money-saving tips | Avoid budget airline card charges

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Comments (13)

  • oldhenry
    Love rating 265
    oldhenry said

    But yoy cannot get on the best tarriffs if you are alreasdy with the company. A right swindle, as ever. So you may not be able to save the headline figures above at all.

    So I ahve to go to OVO a new supplier- just hope they can cope with the number changing!

    Report on 13 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • meldrewreborn
    Love rating 44
    meldrewreborn said

    I've been on a Dual Fuel fixed rate to 2011 with Scottish Power, but i've recently opted out of their electricity to go with Atlantic's FP offering. And going through Quidco and U switch i got £23 for switching on top of the estimated £65 i'll save over the next 12+ months. When will these companies learn that it costs a lot of money to gain a customer, but then they ignore their needs so that the savvy people switch elsewhere.

    Perhaps there are many more people who just do whatever their supplier tells them to do!

    Report on 13 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Neil Faulkner
    Love rating 32
    Neil Faulkner said

    Competition certainly isn't working very effectively, meldrewreborn. I think many people don't realise the huge difference between the cheapest tariffs and the ones they're put on by default. I think they believe all the suppliers, and therefore tariffs, are the same.

    Another reason for many not switching might be plain laziness, but that doesn't stop people switching car insurer every three years on average, where they get comparable average savings.

    Neil

    Report on 13 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • wullig
    Love rating 0
    wullig said

    I have an economy 10 elecy tarriff with Hydro Electric as we have an electric boiler instead of a gas/oil unit. 

    None of the compare tools recognise the tarriff, even the energy companies offer lttle info on it. Hence it is extremely difficult to work out if I'd be cheaper anywhere else.

    Anyone got any advice? ta.

    Report on 13 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • elsiemary
    Love rating 5
    elsiemary said

    I used to be with npower and wondered whether I could do better elsewhere. Coincidently, a 'cold-caller' came knocking on my door representing Southern Electric. He assured me Southern Electric, and pointed out they were one of the few UK owned suppliers, as opposed to 'all the other suppliers' would probably be cheaper than npower. I gave him all my fuel bills - he then phoned Southern Electric office (or should I say he said it was Southern Electric) and confirmed what their costs would have been in comparison to npower. which seemed very reasonable. He also recommended that I reduce my monthly direct debit - also confirmed in a letter from Southern Electric. Sometime later, my bills are certainly not cheaper. My bills are now in arrears and after receiving demanding letters from S.E. I pointed out to them their representative has mis-sold Southern Electric to me and I reduced my direct debit in accordance with their calculations. S.E. have now compensated me with goodwill gesture of £50 off gas and £30 off electric. Guilty conscience I think. I should have remained with npower and not succumbed to temptation!

    Report on 13 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • MrPound
    Love rating 11
    MrPound said

    elsimary - I'm sorry for your experiences but most members of this website would certainly not buy anything from a cold caller - doorstep or telephone. As meldrewrebord suggests above, use a comparison site, use a cashback site and find the best deal. I recently switched from nPower to First Utility. the switch went very smoothly and I'm now saving an estimated £300/year.

    I was surprised when our first monthly bill is around £30 more than nPower but this is because they charge us ased on actual usage and not a fixed direct debit fee. I.E. in December we USED a lot more gas and electricity because of the cold weather. In the summer we should be paying much less. Plus I got £23 via Quidco and a cheque from nPower for the £450 which we'd overpayed! Better in my bank account than theirs.

    Good luck switching away from Southern Electric.

    Report on 14 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Neil Faulkner
    Love rating 32
    Neil Faulkner said

    Hi wullig

    Florian Ritzmann from Xelector (which created and maintains our comparison tables) told me this about trying to switch from Economy 10:

    "There unfortunately is no point in comparing E10, and this is not because we are unwilling to enable this search - suppliers won't take on your supply and there are no competitive offerings. Ofgem has so far completely ignored this issue

    "Unfortunately E10 customers are stuck on their tariff. The best advice for the long terms is to rip out the storage heaters and get either a standard meter or an e7 meter.

    "Phoning the supplier and asking 'what do I have to do' is the first step."

    Sorry that there is no easier solution

    Neil

    Report on 14 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Neil Faulkner
    Love rating 32
    Neil Faulkner said

    Sorry, that should read that Xelector created and maintains our gas and electricity comparison. It doesn't deal with the rest.

    Neil

    Report on 14 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • wullig
    Love rating 0
    wullig said

    Thanks Neil.

    Only thing I would like to highlight, is that although E10 was originally only for storage heating customers, In my case we have a modern wet heating system, but instead of a Gas or Oil boiler, there is a modern electric boiler that heats the radiator water via with a large KW heating element (8 - 12 KW normally). The system heats the hot water via traditional tank and emersion heaters, so the E10 tarrif is used to heat the hot water during the cheap rate periods. 

    So looks like I have no option but to stick with E10 for now. This type of heating system is becoming more popular so hopefully some keen energy supplier(s) will offer some competition soon.

    For those intersested, the energy cost actually work out very reasonable compared with oil/gas, as when the E10 cheap rate is on the entire house is on cheap rate, so we time washing machine, dishwasher, cebtral heating etc for when the cheap rate is on. Our bills for this bigger house are the same as for our last house which was oil heated

    Report on 14 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • elsiemary
    Love rating 5
    elsiemary said

    Thank you Mr Pound for your interesting advice. I would not normally deal with 'cold-callers' but I suppose it was an opportune moment for that cold caller as I was thinking of whether to change suppliers and I suppose you could say he called at the right place at the right time. I will definitely know better next time will even look at the supplier you switched to. 

    Report on 14 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Reality Returns
    Love rating 4
    Reality Returns said

    The real answer is to keep pressure on politicians to take a stand against carbon dioxide reductions and for energy price reductions. Anthropogenic Global Warming is a myth kept alive to tax, hike prices, regulate, interfere and control.

    'Climategate' leaked emails from the Met Office CRU (at the UEA) has shown the political doctoring of temperature records. Thousands of scientists worldwide have now dissented the AGW ideology. The 0.6 deg C average global temperature rise over the 20th century is well within natural climate variation over the centuries of the past 1000 years. Global warming stopped in 1998 and the planet has been cooling since 2004. Alarmism from CO2 biased computer models has no scientific substance even according to some of the scientists who derive the model scenarios.

    CO2 has continued to rise throughout the past 110 years with minimal, if any, temperature consequence. The minor temperature rise is lost on the natural noise and climate scientists know it.

    Until the fatuous 'green obligation' on electricity suppliers goes, we will continue to be ripped off much more on electricity prices. Unsightly unreliable on-shore wind farms are 4 times the cost per kw installed of an equivalent modern combined cycle gas fired plant (CCGT). Off-shore doubles this cost again. Biomass power is 10 times the CCGT cost.

    This AGW nonsense does not come cheap with the green obligation, requirements on the power suppliers to buy carbon credits to generate from relatively cheap hydrocarbons and tax hikes on fuel.

    The cost to the British public is estimated to be £700 billion. You ain't seen nothing yet - trust me, I'm an energy analyst!

    To check it all out see Christopher Booker, James Delingpole, Gerald Warner and Janet Daley in the Telegraph articles on this issue. To check the most eminent scientists dissenting from the AGW bandwagon see Senators Inhofe's and Hatch's listings with statements. The website 'watsupwithat' is also a good source of more detailed information.

    We are wasting £ billions on our power bills to abate plant food. My reference to plant food for CO2 is from the statements of Professor John Christy (Climatologist) and UN-IPCC expert reviewer.

    Report on 17 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • rpb
    Love rating 26
    rpb said

    There is quite a readable summary of "The Global Warming Sceptics vs The Scientific Consensus" here:

    http://www.informationisbeautiful.net/visualizations/climate-change-deniers-vs-the-consensus/

    From what I've read, the whole "Climategate" things was blown out of all proportion, and wasn't really a big deal.

    Report on 18 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • rpb
    Love rating 26
    rpb said

    This is quite informative on the subject as well:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_opinion_on_climate_change

    Here's an interesting quotation from this article:

      "... no remaining scientific body of national or international standing is known to reject the basic findings of human influence on recent climate change."

    That's *none* of them.

    Interestingly, the last body to change its position (from dissenting) in 2007 was from the American Association of Petroleum Geologists...

    Report on 18 January 2010  |  Love thisLove  1 love

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