Introduction: Treasury to announce reduced energy support scheme for businesses
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
New measures to help UK firms cope with soaring energy bills are expected to finally be announced today, but the support is likely to be less generous than the current package.
The new package is due to be announced to MPs today, ahead of the expiry of the present support package at the end of March.
Since the start of October, the unit cost of electricity and gas for non-domestic customers has been capped to help them through the winter – which is expected to have cost over £18bn by the end of March.
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt warned UK businesses last week that the current level of energy bill support for firms is “unsustainably expensive” – a hint that support will be cut from April.
The new scheme is expected to offer a discount to wholesale costs, rather than a fixed energy price, and heavy energy users could get a larger discount. It is expected to run for 12 months, until March 2024.
As Tony Jordan, a senior partner at consultancy Auxilione, explains:
“There is an acceptance that the structure of the commercial energy market is very, very complex.
Energy suppliers simply do not have the data on which industries their customers are in to tailor the support.”
A decision on how to extend the support for businesses had been due before Christmas, but was postponed until the new year, which left businesses facing “an anxious and uncertain” festive period.
The extent of Hunt’s reduction will also be crucial, as our energy correspondent Alex Lawson explained last weekend:
It has been reported that support could be cut by as much as half, potentially pushing up the “government-supported price” beyond £400 per MWh for electricity and £150 per MWh for gas, he says here.
The good news for businesses is that warmer-than-usual winter weather in northern Europe has helped to pull down wholesale energy costs in recent weeks.
But wholesale gas prices are still over double their levels two years ago, despite dropping back from their highs after the Ukraine invasion last year.
Also coming up today
A leading thinktank has warned that British households are only halfway through a two-year cost of living crisis which will wipe over £2,000 off average incomes.
Typical disposable incomes for working-age family households are on track to fall by 3% in this financial year, and by 4% in the year to April 2024, according to the Resolution Foundation.
Resolution’s annual Living Standards Outlook for 2023 finds that only incomes of the very richest will rise, while middle-income households will struggle to make ends meet after an average £2,100 loss.
This income squeeze has fuelled industrial unrest across the UK in recent months, with strikes on the railways, in the civil service and within the NHS.
Ministers are set to hold a series of meetings with union leaders today. Rail minister Huw Merriman will hold talks with railway union bosses, who insist the Government is blocking a deal to end the long-running row over pay, jobs and conditions.
European stock markets are expected to open higher, as investors cling to hopes that the inflation squeeze may have peaked.
The agenda
Key events
Filters BETA
The CEO of restaurant group Gusto says the company’s energy bill has doubled this year, despite the price cap over the winter.
Matt Snell told Radio 4’s Today programme that Gusto’s energy bill is forecast to be £1.5m this year, up from £750,000 in a typical year.
Snell says:
The support that the government put in place over the last six months has not really touched the sides.
He explains that Gusto, which has 14 sites around the UK, can’t simply adapt to a 100% increase in energy bills, at a time when food and wage costs are up 20%.
And he criticises energy companies for demanding “ridiculous deposits” from business customers to enter into energy contracts. Gusto, he says, had to pay £150,000 just to enter a contract.
He says hospitality firms are looking for a “fair deal” from energy companies, who he says did not help businesses through the crisis.
There is a view in the industry, and I share it, that they’ve profiteered from this.
Snell points out that the price cap announced last autumn did not cover additional costs, such as delivery costs which can push up the cost of gas sharply.
Snell adds that energy regulator Ofgem should get involved to regulate such costs.
UK manufacturers fear blackouts and job losses
Almost two-thirds of manufacturers in Britain fear blackouts this winter amid the fallout from the energy crisis, according to an industry survey.
Trade body MakeUK said the impact from sky-high energy costs on manufacturers showed no sign of abating, as concern grows about government plans to cut financial support for businesses.
According to a survey of more than 200 senior manufacturing industry bosses by MakeUK and the accountancy firm PwC, almost three-quarters of companies (70%) expect their energy costs to increase this year, with two-thirds saying they expect to cut production or jobs as a result.
The industry group, which represents 20,000 UK manufacturers, said that cutting financial support would exacerbate job losses and reduce factory output, hurting the economy.
More here:
Natasha Clark of The Sun has more details of today’s upcoming announcement on energy support for businesss:
Introduction: Treasury to announce reduced energy support scheme for businesses
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
New measures to help UK firms cope with soaring energy bills are expected to finally be announced today, but the support is likely to be less generous than the current package.
The new package is due to be announced to MPs today, ahead of the expiry of the present support package at the end of March.
Since the start of October, the unit cost of electricity and gas for non-domestic customers has been capped to help them through the winter – which is expected to have cost over £18bn by the end of March.
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt warned UK businesses last week that the current level of energy bill support for firms is “unsustainably expensive” – a hint that support will be cut from April.
The new scheme is expected to offer a discount to wholesale costs, rather than a fixed energy price, and heavy energy users could get a larger discount. It is expected to run for 12 months, until March 2024.
As Tony Jordan, a senior partner at consultancy Auxilione, explains:
“There is an acceptance that the structure of the commercial energy market is very, very complex.
Energy suppliers simply do not have the data on which industries their customers are in to tailor the support.”
A decision on how to extend the support for businesses had been due before Christmas, but was postponed until the new year, which left businesses facing “an anxious and uncertain” festive period.
The extent of Hunt’s reduction will also be crucial, as our energy correspondent Alex Lawson explained last weekend:
It has been reported that support could be cut by as much as half, potentially pushing up the “government-supported price” beyond £400 per MWh for electricity and £150 per MWh for gas, he says here.
The good news for businesses is that warmer-than-usual winter weather in northern Europe has helped to pull down wholesale energy costs in recent weeks.
But wholesale gas prices are still over double their levels two years ago, despite dropping back from their highs after the Ukraine invasion last year.
Also coming up today
A leading thinktank has warned that British households are only halfway through a two-year cost of living crisis which will wipe over £2,000 off average incomes.
Typical disposable incomes for working-age family households are on track to fall by 3% in this financial year, and by 4% in the year to April 2024, according to the Resolution Foundation.
Resolution’s annual Living Standards Outlook for 2023 finds that only incomes of the very richest will rise, while middle-income households will struggle to make ends meet after an average £2,100 loss.
This income squeeze has fuelled industrial unrest across the UK in recent months, with strikes on the railways, in the civil service and within the NHS.
Ministers are set to hold a series of meetings with union leaders today. Rail minister Huw Merriman will hold talks with railway union bosses, who insist the Government is blocking a deal to end the long-running row over pay, jobs and conditions.
European stock markets are expected to open higher, as investors cling to hopes that the inflation squeeze may have peaked.