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    1. Hungry_Horace on

      What a surprise!

      Bend over and grab your ankles everyone, shareholders still need their bubbly.

    2. unknowntoff on

      Breaking news, wholesale price rises cause retail prices to rise.

      Shock horror

    3. Would it be too much to ask for these businesses to actually lose money when this happens, or do we always have to subsidise a win/win for them?

    4. lNFORMATlVE on

      Just to point out, just two years ago in 2024:

      > “*The boss of the British Gas owner, Centrica, has seen his earnings nearly double to **£8.2m**, despite having admitted that his smaller pay packet the previous year [of £4.5m] was “impossible to justify”.*

      > *Chris O’Shea earned a basic salary of **£903,000**, which was topped up by cash and share bonuses worth an extra **£7.3m**.”*

      From:

      https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/mar/26/british-gas-owner-doubles-bosss-pay-to-8m-despite-qualms-over-previous-rise

      I would bet serious money that his bonuses are not going to go down, nor stay the same, while his company “inescapably” passes on this crisis’ costs directly to the average joe trying to heat his house.

    5. We should have diversified to the degree we could end our involvement in the middle east shitshow years ago.

    6. Bitter-Policy4645 on

      Ofgem will no doubt, do absolutely nothing to regulate the energy companies.

    7. Email from Octopus Energy:

      > I’ve been getting a lot of questions about how the latest news impacts energy prices. I want to tell you directly what it all means for you:

      > From April 1, energy bills are falling.
      This is largely thanks to the Government’s decision to remove some levies and obligations from energy bills — a move Octopus has championed for years. Moving these costs off your bills and into general taxation is a fairer way to recover them, and it’s finally making a difference to your monthly costs — take a look at the PDF attached for a personalised breakdown

      > Standing charges: No rises from Octopus
      The April price cap actually increases standing charges for electricity in most areas of Britain to cover some of the cost of grid upgrades. The other large suppliers have been quick to pass these rises on.

      > We don’t think it’s right. Standing charges are already too high, so Octopus is holding or reducing electricity standing charges in every region. We remain the only large supplier to have never charged the full Ofgem price cap, and we’re committed to keeping standing charges as low as possible.

      > Global context and the Price Cap
      It is impossible to ignore the news regarding the war in Iran and other global conflicts. These events naturally create uncertainty in the wholesale energy markets, and sadly Britain is far too dependent on natural gas.

      > However, because of the way the Ofgem Price Cap works, you are protected from any immediate price rises until July at the earliest. We hope, for many reasons, that these conflicts are resolved quickly and that wholesale prices can return to more typical levels before the next cap update.

      > If you need certainty about your energy bills for the next year, we’re still offering fixed tariffs at the moment. They’re more expensive than they were just a few weeks ago, but if you just can’t risk future rises in July or over winter, they could be a good choice.

      > The bigger picture: Electrifying everything
      This latest bout of international turmoil is yet another reminder of why we must move away from volatile fossil fuels. By ditching natural gas and electrifying everything, we can power our homes and businesses with cheap, home-grown renewable energy where prices aren’t sent soaring by global conflict.

      > Many customers tell us that they feel more protected from fossil fuel shocks since investing in a heat pump, solar panels, or an electric car (and often save on bills by making the most of clean electricity with a smart tariff).
      What this means for you.
      There’s a personalised breakdown for you in the PDF attached to this email.

      > We’re not adjusting your payments right now. As ever, we’ll keep an eye on them and suggest a change if it looks like you’re paying too little or too much.

      > You can also check our unique Balance Forecast in your online account to get a sense of whether your monthly payments are set at a sensible level and adjust them if helpful.

      > If you are struggling with your bills, please let us know — you can apply or find out more about our support fund, standing charge help or our electric blanket scheme.

      > I hope this email has been helpful — please let me know your views and any suggestions via this short survey. Your candid feedback makes a real difference.

      > Yours sincerely,

      > Greg Jackson

      > Founder, Octopus Energy

    8. The bloke down the rough pub in town offering to rig meters must make a killing these days.

    9. Awful cunt who used fire and rehire on all of his guys to force them onto worse contracts.

    10. messiah-of-cheese on

      Because he and his exec colleagues will not, and have not done anything at all to do anything about this obvious problem.

      They will still get their bonuses for literally ‚keeping the lights on‘ the easiest job in the world.

      There is no profit in it for them to have decent reseverses or a sustainable, reliable source.

    11. What do people expect him to say.

      We’ve taken a huge bank loan people, we’ve got this?

    12. BonkertonDonkerton on

      Electric prices need to separate from gas prices this is getting ridiculous

    13. BourbonSn4ke on

      He even looks like a villian from the 18th century, give him half a chance and he will send the kids to work

    14. Watch them normalise the higher priced then keep them high when the oil price drops again

    15. Amusingly BG sent me an email this morning telling me my prices were falling.

    16. Woah there horsey. If wholesale price rises are to increase and that is passed down to the consumers… how about we talk about the SLT and CSuite bonuses being reduced by the same percentage because they failed to diversify their supply chain and protect those who pay their salaries..

    17. Tall_Relief_9914 on

      Very quick to raise prices, not so quick to bring them down when wholesale drops. It’s crazy that in 2026 we still have shareholders mixed up with services people need to live.

    18. Infrastructure companies like energy should have CEO base pay linked to average earning at said company and bonus capped in some manner.. it’s disgusting that our bills sky rocket during these “hard times” so these places don’t go bust yet somehow profits go through the fucking roof

      I get an arse fucking without lube would be easier to take

    19. SoggyWotsits on

      At least gas customers have some sort of cap on their bills, unlike those of us on oil.

    20. philthybiscuits on

      Yet another reason why the UK’s energy prices should not be uniformly guided by the price of oil. 

      It’s mental that even energy being generated by renewables gets a price hike just because – for, what, the third time in a decade? – oil prices have gone nuts because of some bellends who fancied a bit of killing and invading. Again 

    21. Winter_Parsley8706 on

      Hear me out here – cant they just break even (after wages) over 12 months instead of making massive profits – like I would have to if I ran my own business? I honestly dont understand why that cant happen. Im too thick to understand I think

    22. But I just read that the UK only gets 2% of its gas through the Straights of Hormuz. Sounds like a scam to me!

    23. I see. When wholesale prices are low, they can’t lower the bills because those costs are just a fraction of the total.

      When wholesale prices rise, prices rise quickly.

      When are we eating these pricks?

    24. What’s to bet it will be the exact amount or more than we will get when the prices change in April…

    25. TalosAnthena on

      We will all just continue to pay whatever you say we have to pay. Nobody ever does anything about it like the French

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