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Are you going to struggle with energy bills this winter?
Please email: james.robinson@mailonline.co.uk 

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Britons could die this winter due to surging energy prices, Martin Lewis warned today after Ofgem confirmed an 80 per cent rise in the price cap - sending the average household's yearly bill from £1,971 to £3,549 from October.

The cap announcement today will come into effect for around 24million households in England, Scotland and kombi Servisi Wales on default energy tariffs on October 1, and will remain in place until December 31, when it will be adjusted again.

The 4.5million pre-payment meter customers across Britain, who are often the most vulnerable and already in fuel poverty, will see an even more punishing increase - with their average annual bill set to go up to £3,608.

And kombi servisi things could get even worse next year, with experts at consultancy Auxilione using latest gas prices to predict that the cap will rise by another 52 per cent to £5,405 in January 2023, then by a further 34 per cent to £7,263 in April - before falling slightly, by 11 per cent to £6,485 in July and Kombi Servisi by another 7 per cent to £6,006 in October.

MoneySavingExpert founder Mr Lewis, who became emotional at times while giving passionate interviews to TV and radio shows this morning, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'I've been accused of catastrophising over this situation. Well, the reason I have catastrophised is this is a catastrophe, plain and Kombi Servisi simple.

If we do not get further government intervention on top of what was announced in May, lives will be lost this winter.' 

The consumer champion also said the latest rise in the cap means some people will pay up to £10,000 a year in bills.
And he warned that there is no cap on the maximum you pay - but the cap is actually a maximum cost per unit that firms can charge for gas and electricity. Currently, this equates to £1,971 a year for the average home.

Ofgem said that from October 1 the equivalent per unit level of the price cap to the nearest pence for a typical customer paying by direct debit will be 52p per kWh for electricity customers and a standing charge of 46p per day.

The equivalent per unit level for a typical gas customer is 15p per kWh with a standing charge of 28p per day.

As business groups and think tanks offered stark warnings over the crisis throughout the course of today: 

  • Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi admitted the rise would cause 'stress' and people could need to ration energy;
  • Campaigners said the number of UK households in fuel poverty will have doubled in a year by this October; 
  • Prime Minister Boris Johnson insisted 'extra cash' will be announced next month to support households; and
  • Sir Keir Starmer said it is 'absolutely unforgivable' that the Government is 'missing in action' amid the crisis.
MoneySavingExpert founder Mr Lewis, who became emotional at times while giving passionate interviews to TV and radio shows this morning, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'I've been accused of catastrophising over this situation. Well, the reason I have catastrophised is this is a catastrophe, plain and simple.'

MoneySavingExpert founder Mr Lewis, who became emotional at times while giving passionate interviews to TV and radio shows this morning, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'I've been accused of catastrophising over this situation. Well, the reason I have catastrophised is this is a catastrophe, plain and simple.'

The consumer champion said the latest rise in the cap means some people will pay up to £10,000 a year in bills

The consumer champion said the latest rise in the cap means some people will pay up to £10,000 a year in bills

Ofgem's chief executive Jonathan Brearley warned of the hardship energy prices will cause this winter and urged the incoming prime minister and new Cabinet 'to provide an additional and urgent response to continued surging energy prices'.

He also said that the gas price this winter was 15 times more than the cost two years ago.

The regulator said the increase reflected the continued rise in global wholesale gas prices, which began to surge as the pandemic eased, and had been driven still higher by Russia slowly switching off gas supplies to Europe.

Ofgem also warned that energy prices could get 'significantly worse' next year.

The regulator said that some suppliers might start increasing the amount that direct debit customers pay before October 1, to spread out payments, but any money taken by suppliers will only ever be spent on supplying energy to households.

Philippe Commaret, the managing director of energy giant EDF, has warned that half of UK households could be in fuel poverty in January as a result of rocketing prices.

And the Trades Union Congress has said energy bills will rise 35 times faster than wages and 57 times faster than benefits in the last three months of this year.

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