Over 1.5 Million Brits Affected As 7th UK Energy Retailer Fails
Small-sized UK energy retailers are dropping like flies amid an energy crisis. Bloomberg’s Javier Blas reports the sixth retailer has gone bankrupt since the crisis began at the start of August, which coincides with surging wholesale costs of natural gas and electricity.
Green Energy is a small-sized energy retailer with 250,000 customers. Blas said the company folded Wednesday and is the sixth one to do so. There was no mention on which larger firm would acquire Green Energy’s customer base.
FT’s energy analyst Nathalie Thomas also reported a seventh firm has gone under, called Avro Energy, with a customer base of around 580,000.
Bloomberg reports at least 1.5 million households have been affected by the energy supplier collapse thanks to the strain of surging energy costs.
We noted Monday, out of the 55 or so energy retailers, only six to ten will be left standing after the smoke clears.
Smaller companies didn’t have the means to hedge or were caught off guard by soaring natural gas prices, leaving many of them underwater who bought energy at lower prices.
Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng warned this week the country should prepare for higher prices ahead of winter.
Morgan Stanley’s global energy head Martijn Rats shared a chart of many commodity prices, including Europe’s natural gas and electricity prices, surging to never before seen levels. The natural gas shortage is widespread and has resulted in the IEA demanding Russia to do more to increase gas availability to Europe and ensure storage is filled ahead of the winter season.
We suspect other smaller firms to fail in the coming days and weeks ahead.
There’s a growing risk that a bankruptcy wave of power providers is nearing as several small firms stopped accepting new customers Tuesday amid a worsening energy crisis, according to Bloomberg.
Ampower, Green, Igloo, NEO, and Utilita Energy posted notices on their websites earlier today that they weren’t accepting new customers. This comes as several weaker rivals have already gone bankrupt as natural gas and power prices surge to record levels, leaving power suppliers who sold energy at lower prices underwater.
We noted Monday, out of the 55 or so power suppliers, only six to ten will be left standing after the smoke clears. So far, five have gone bust since the start of August, which coincides with surging wholesale costs of natural gas and electricity.
“A lot of the smaller ones are probably going to go,” said Niall Trimble, managing director of consultant Energy Contract Co. “If you were planning to buy gas for 50 pence and it’s 150 pence, that’s a hell of a blow to your finances.”
Bloomberg Intelligence’s Patricio Alvarez said low inventories in Europe ahead of the winter season are primarily the triggers for U.K.’s energy crisis. Here’s more:
Low gas inventories in Europe, ebbing pipeline imports and strong Asian demand driving liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargo diversions form a constructive backdrop for regional wholesale gas prices into heating season.
Tapering domestic output, competitive global LNG markets and increased gas burn for power generation amid carbon-price volatility may keep balances tight in 2022 as a post-pandemic recovery unfolds. A mild winter could ease prices from record highs, while piped supplies could improve from higher Norway volume and the potential startup of Russia’s Nord Stream 2 by year-end.
So to Alvarez’s point above, natural gas markets will be tight across the U.K. this winter and will support higher prices. This may cause a tidal wave of corporate failures and economic disruption with industries that are heavily reliant on natural gas and byproducts (we’ve already mentioned slaughterhouses and the food industry being affected).
Back to the bust of smaller power firms, Igloo’s CEO, Matt Clemow, wrote on the company’s website that “like some of our competitors, we have decided to pause sales activity for now.” He said, “with unprecedented wholesale prices, we have taken this decision to allow our teams to focus on those customers we already supply.”
According to Bloomberg, the government’s cap of power prices for consumers “means it’s not profitable for larger companies to come to the rescue.”
U.K. Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng told Parliament Monday that the U.K. won’t bail out power suppliers. But that was conflicting with U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s statement to reporters saying the government would do everything in its power to prevent a bankruptcy wave.
On Monday, the retail arm of Centrica Plc added 350,000 domestic customers and 500 businesses after it took over failed supplier People’s Energy.
See more here: zerohedge.com
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Carbon Bigfoot
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“Headwinds 21” Documentary
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SteveT
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“…amid carbon-price volatility…”
There is your big, big clue. Get rid of carbon pricing and it all disappears.
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Artelia
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This crises has been deliberately manufactured and the big energy suppliers are in on it. There is an interruption of gas flowing from Russia because the EU have not filled in the paperwork and opened the pipeline. The US was anxious for it not to open and may be threatening and bribing to delay or to stop the opening of it. In the UK we have closed down our gas storage plants, how clever that was of us. Russia has been selling more gas to China and the prices have increased, particularly because of the shortage from not having the gas flowing through the new pipeline. We want to hurt Russia but are only hurting the people of the UK.
There are two and three year contracts for gas at high prices but I do think the bumped up gas prices may yet fall a long way and become just a bit higher than they were last year. The majority of supply contracts have just been for one year. These high tarriffs of long duration, two and three years are opportunistic, feeding into our hording mentality and fears of even more gas inflation. I would prefer a good variable deal. The prices for fuel at the garage pumps should also level out and go down soon.
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