Standing Charges – which you pay just for the facility of having gas and electricity, even if you don't use any – currently make up £300 of the average bill, penalising lower-use households and disincentivising people from cutting their energy usage. In the latest must-listen instalment of The Martin Lewis Podcast, Martin discusses the issue and what can be done about it with Ofgem boss Jonathan Brearley...
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'Why can't you just cut Standing Charges?' – Martin Lewis puts your questions to energy regulator boss
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'Why can't you just cut Standing Charges?' – Martin Lewis puts your questions to regulator boss
Comments
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Ahh these headlines make Martin Lewis sound like he is a primary school child.1
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If anyone could bear to listen to it, did he suggest where to find £7 billion?0
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Is he going to give the Magic Money Tree a shake?Qyburn said:If anyone could bear to listen to it, did he suggest where to find £7 billion?N. Hampshire, he/him. Octopus Intelligent Go elec & Tracker gas / Vodafone BB / iD mobile. Ripple Kirk Hill Coop member.Ofgem cap table, Ofgem cap explainer. Economy 7 cap explainer. Gas vs E7 vs peak elec heating costs, Best kettle!
2.72kWp PV facing SSW installed Jan 2012. 11 x 247w panels, 3.6kw inverter. 34 MWh generated, long-term average 2.6 Os.1 -
This should be fun...

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After the farce over mobile/broadband annual increase change. When the obvious answer was to make them a fixed term contract with no increases.
Perhaps as a self appointed mouth for the public. Taking a back seat would be a option, before anymore damage is done, & Joe Public getting further ripped off...Life in the slow lane1 -
I thought ofgem was to protect the public.It seems they protect the utility companies. Who pays there wages0
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Their job is not to protect anyone, it is to regulate the industry so it firstly remains functional and second does not make excessive profits. Energy suppliers make an average of 4.8% net profit, low by many business sector standards, over the last five years they have had to face nearly eighteen months when they were forced to sell energy at a loss, which is why so many of them went bust, last year their profit was capped at 3.8% on the SVT, in 2023 it was less than 3%.peter1945 said:I thought ofgem was to protect the public.It seems they protect the utility companies. Who pays there wages
Or when you say "protect", do you mean you just mean cheaper, even that is not viable?1 -
https://www.ofgem.gov.uk/about-us#:~:text=We are responsible for:,quality service from energy companiesMattMattMattUK said:
Their job is not to protect anyone,peter1945 said:I thought ofgem was to protect the public.It seems they protect the utility companies. Who pays there wages
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