The Guardian Australia

UK energy suppliers to face new stress tests after dozens collapse

- Jillian Ambrose Energy correspond­ent

UK energy suppliers will face new financial stress tests from January as part of a series of plans from the industry regulator to boost the sector’s resilience after rocketing market prices for gas and electricit­y caused dozens to collapse.

Ofgem will test providers against a range of scenarios and set an improvemen­t plan for companies showing signs of financial weakness that could put their customers at risk.

The regulator also plans to toughen existing financial rules for suppliers and introduce new conditions by the spring, which could include checks on senior energy company bosses.

In some cases, Ofgem may bar a provider from taking on new accounts before reaching certain milestones, such as 50,000 and 200,000 customers, until it is satisfied that they are financiall­y resilient.

The planned regulation shake-up comes as Ofgem faces deepening criticism over the collapse of 26 energy suppliers in the last four months, which has left almost 4 million customers in need of a new supplier.

The cost of managing the fallout of the UK’s energy market crisis, including the collapse of Bulb Energy, which had 1.7m customers, is expected to reach highs of almost £3.2bn – or £120 a household – on top of the hit to domestic bills from record high energy market prices.

Households have faced one of the steepest energy bill increases on record this winter because of a global gas crisis, with market prices hitting fresh highs across Europe this week. UK gas prices reached a record closing price of 322.5 pence a therm on Tuesday, according to data from market price experts at ICIS, surpassing the previous high of just over 298p/therm set in early October this year.

Citizens Advice has laid the blame for the spiralling cost of managing the crisis on Ofgem for failing to take action against rule-breaking suppliers for almost 10 years despite mounting concerns over the energy market.

Jonathan Brearley, the chief executive of Ofgem, said the regulator has worked hard to protect consumers as gas prices have risen by more than 500% in under a year but has admitted that regulation would need to “go much further”.

He said: “I want to see more checks on staff in significan­t roles, and better use of data to help us regulate. We need a regime that can enable a sustainabl­e market, to promote our transition to net zero.

“The months ahead will be difficult for many, and we are working with the government and energy companies to mitigate the impact as much as we can, particular­ly for the most vulnerable households.”

Ofgem has also put forward plans to adjust how the price cap is calculated, so that it can rise more quickly. This would help energy suppliers to cover their costs and avoid going bust in the face of soaring market prices, which are not yet reflected by the price cap.

The regulator is also considerin­g some short-term interventi­ons to help stabilise the market.

 ?? Photograph: Niklas Halle’n/AFP/Getty Images ?? Ofgem also plans to introduce new conditions by the spring, which could include checks on senior energy company bosses.
Photograph: Niklas Halle’n/AFP/Getty Images Ofgem also plans to introduce new conditions by the spring, which could include checks on senior energy company bosses.

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