British assured after natural gas price rise

No company bailouts, lawmakers told

From left, Britain's Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng, Home Secretary Priti Patel, Housing Secretary Michael Gove, Justice Secretary and deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab, and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, participate in the first Cabinet meeting since the reshuffle, at 10 Downing Street, in London, Friday, Sept. 17, 2021. (Ben Stansall/Pool Photo via AP)
From left, Britain's Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng, Home Secretary Priti Patel, Housing Secretary Michael Gove, Justice Secretary and deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab, and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, participate in the first Cabinet meeting since the reshuffle, at 10 Downing Street, in London, Friday, Sept. 17, 2021. (Ben Stansall/Pool Photo via AP)

LONDON -- Britain's business secretary said on Monday that there is no danger that people won't be able to heat their homes this winter after a surge in natural gas prices forced him to hold emergency talks with energy suppliers and consumer groups.

Kwasi Kwarteng also assured lawmakers that the government wouldn't bail out failing energy suppliers as a result of the growing crisis. He earlier said that the government is prepared to appoint a special administrator for failed suppliers to ensure gas and electricity keeps flowing until their customers can be moved to new suppliers.

"There is absolutely no question of the lights going out or people being unable to heat their homes," Kwarteng told the House of Commons. "There will be no three-day working weeks or a throwback to the 1970s. Such thinking is alarmist, unhelpful and completely misguided."

Four small energy companies have failed in recent weeks because of the sudden increase in gas prices worldwide. Wholesale gas prices in Britain have tripled this year as the global economic recovery from the covid-19 pandemic increases demand at the same time storms in the U.S. and planned maintenance have crimped supplies.

Kwarteng stressed that Britain's diverse gas supply means it has more than enough to meet the nation's energy needs, unlike some European countries that rely on a single source. The United Kingdom gets half its gas supplies from domestic production, 30% from Norway, and the rest from European pipelines and liquefied natural gas delivered by ship.

Still, supporting the energy industry through the current troubles may ultimately cost taxpayers billions.

One option proposed by some large energy firms is to move the customers of failed suppliers into a temporary government-owned company that could be sold at a later date, British media reported. This proposal would be similar to the so-called bad banks that were used to house the high-risk assets of some lenders during the global financial crisis.

Another option is for the government to provide loan guarantees to large energy suppliers so they can absorb the customers of failed companies. The costs of such a program would ultimately be recovered through higher energy bills.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson put the problems at the door of an economic recovery that he likened to "the big thaw" after a frost had frozen the pipes.

"That's when you have the problems and the leaks and all the difficulties, that's really what's happening to the global economy," he told reporters in New York at the U.N. General Assembly. "It's thawing very rapidly and you are seeing problems in the supply chains, very strong demand for gas around the world is producing this phenomenon. But we're going to fix it."

U.K. consumers are already feeling the pinch, with price comparison websites reporting heavy volume as people search for increasingly rare opportunities to lock in prices with long-term contracts. Gas and electricity costs for many people are set to jump next month after regulators in August approved a 12% price increase for customers without such contracts.

Peter Smith, director of policy and advocacy at fuel poverty charity National Energy Action, said the spike in energy prices couldn't come at a worse time for consumers who are already struggling with the economic impact of the pandemic.

Overall consumer prices rose at the fastest pace on record in the year through August, pushing the inflation rate to 4.1%, the Office for National Statistics said last week.

Before the pandemic, about 13% of households in England and 25% in Scotland were classified as experiencing fuel poverty, defined as spending a high proportion of household income to keep their homes at a reasonable temperature.

"Millions of people across the U.K. are already at breaking point and experiencing the desperate consequences of not being able to heat their homes,″ Smith said. "The U.K. government and energy regulator need to urgently address the toxic impact this is going to have on physical and mental health across the U.K. this winter.″

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