UK Energy Regulator OFGEM has opened an overview of how costs in the energy system are allocated in an attempt to make energy bills more fairer.
The cost allocation and recovery review (Car) will look at the entire energy system of energy generation to household use and explore the considerations involved in different models of cost allocation.
Orgem said that many domestic customers have made it clear that they find the current system unfair – multiple assessments of standing charges painted one “Stark photo” of the dissatisfaction of users With the current system – but the regulator said his research indicates: “There is no consensus on a preferred alternative model”.
After the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (onsnz), the car will have a decision against the implementation of a zonal price system for electricity markets in the UK, a decision Undoubtedly placed business interests first.
The Living Standards Coalition, formed from more than 100 MPs, called on the government last week to ‘overhaul’ the way in which energy bills are calculated. A zonal system was claimed by its supporters to offer lower energy bills for areas with a high generation of renewable energy sources, so consumers felt the benefit of clean electricity.
Earlier, or gem CEO Jonathan Brearley (that spoke for zonal Something that made the regulatory body clear was his individual attitude) said that an evaluation of the costs of the energy system would look at the possibility of “progressive invoicing”.
“What [the review] Will it mean that it looks at the account and says: “Are there ways in which we can attach the price that customers pay for fixed costs in income?” He added.
Director of Policy at Handelsbody Energy UK Adam Berman wrote in a LinkedIn post that the assessment “reopens the never-ending discussion about social rates”, adding that the assessment is a “useful exercise”, but that without “a joint effort from the government to find out how we can shy away, the best chairs around, the cover chairs around, the cover chairs around, the cover chairs around, the cover chairs around, the cover chairs around, the cover chairs around, the cover chairs around, the cover chairs around, the deckstelen, the deckstobs,” the deckstelen, “.”
Balancing of the system costs and needs of the consumer
In the launch of the car, orgem pointed out that although increased generation of renewable energy is less dependent on volatile global fossil fuel markets, increasing market stability and the theoretical lowering of energy bills, maintenance investments and upgrades in the system, which will increase the fixed costs under the current system.
System costs are paid by users and consumers of the energy system through their energy bills, with individual independent bills for electricity and gas. They are charged for both domestic and non-domestic energy users.
It said that drivers change costs in the energy system, and energy takes a larger part of the household accounts than before.
The British energy system is increasingly based on fixed costs, determined by things such as the costs of infrastructure, policy such as the Clean industrial bonusAnd the customer service of energy companies.
Brearley explained: “As we switch to a safer, native, renewable energy-based energy system, unit costs can fall due to a reduced dependence on duration and fleeting gas. However, fixed cost-as needed to upgrade the energy network to upgrade the energy network to rise to our cleaner and save cleaner” “” “”
OFEM currently does not recommend a specific option and is looking for views of as many stakeholders as possible. The goal is to start a consultation with different options for change.
It noted (just like Berman on LinkedIn) that decisions about how costs are shared about accounts and taxes, or those who receive extra support, are for the chosen government. However, the role of the regulator is to protect consumers.
