‘Bleak Friday’: websites of UK energy suppliers
crash in meter reading rush
Customers try to beat 54% price rise, as multiple
hikes from council tax to VAT on pints also come into effect
Rob Davies
and Rupert Jones
Thu 31 Mar
2022 19.21 BST
Millions of
households faced chaos on Thursday as the websites of the major energy
providers crashed after being overwhelmed by a flood of customers rushing to
secure cheaper bills ahead of Friday’s massive hike in prices.
Panicked
customers rushed to submit meter readings, responding to advice to ensure they
got a cheaper rate for energy right up until the end of the day.
At the
stroke of midnight, average annual energy bills were due to rise to £1,971 on a
day being called “bleak Friday” by some, with multiple scheduled price hikes
from council tax to VAT on pints adding to the spiralling cost-of-living
crisis.
As
households around the country hurried to ensure they were charged at the lower
rate for longer, British Gas, EDF, E.ON, SSE Scottish Power and Bulb all
appeared to struggle with the volume of submissions from households.
Customers
of multiple major energy suppliers vented their fury after finding that they
were unable to send in readings.
The
problems began on the British Gas website as early as Wednesday, as people
logging on to the “submit a meter reading” section were met with a message
saying: “Service temporarily unavailable”.
The site
was still inaccessible on Thursday, displaying a “proxy error” message. There
were also reports that the app was down.
SSE
customers trying to send in readings were greeted with a message that said:
“Sorry, we’re working on this part of our website.”
Customers
also reported difficulty submitting readings to EDF, E.ON and Scottish Power,
with some questioning why the faults happened just as households were trying to
reduce their bills.
“If I was a
little bit more cynical I might think this was intentional,” said one Twitter
user.
E.ON
appeared to blame the consumer affairs expert Martin Lewis, who had advised
people to submit readings, for its website’s failure to cope with the surge of
interest.
A company
Twitter account wrote that Lewis had “once again created unprecedented demand
bringing down Britain” before the message was later deleted.
The chaos
came against a backdrop of persistently high prices for natural gas, which
spiked in early winter and are now expected to remain high because of the
invasion of Ukraine by Russia, the world’s second-largest gas supplier.
The trade
body Energy UK urged customers not to worry, saying: “Most suppliers are
offering alternative options such as submitting at a later date, and different
methods to send meter readings such as text, social media and email.
“This
demonstrates the scale of the problem and how worried people are about high
prices, which is why we have been asking government to intervene to provide
further support to consumers.”
The chaos
was triggered by energy regulator Ofgem increasing the price cap, the maximum
per-unit rate that can be charged for gas and electricity, in response to
persistently sky-high wholesale gas prices.
An average
home on a default tariff paying by direct debit faces an increase on their
annual bill of £693, or 54%, to £1,971, a rise that has prompted widespread
concern about the spiralling cost-of-living crisis.
Experts
have said the war in Ukraine could drive annual bills to £3,000 at the next
price cap decision in October.
Some of the
poorest people in the UK will “simply starve or freeze” as a result, Lewis has
warned.
Rishi Sunak
has faced criticism for not doing more to help people struggling with energy
bills in his spring statement. But the chancellor has so far refused to build
upon existing support for households, which has been branded inadequate by
Labour.
The
government has also effectively ruled out a windfall tax on North Sea oil firms
to help fund extra help on energy bills.
Pressure on
gas prices has been further complicated by a drive among western economies to
reduce reliance on Russian supplies.
Joe Biden
signed a deal with the EU earlier this month to increase US deliveries of
liquefied natural gas (LNG) in the hope of diluting the power conferred on the
Kremlin by Russia’s hold on gas reserves.
But the
deal is unlikely to have an impact on prices, with increased demand for
shipments of LNG typically leading to suppliers charging higher prices for it.
While
energy bills are one of the most noticeable extra costs facing households, the
increase is accompanied by a host of other rising costs, some also coming into
effect from 1 April.
Council tax
is rising by an average of 3.5%, or £67, from Friday, while telecoms and
streaming companies have announced price hikes across their services, amounting
to approximately an on average increase of £42 a year.
Social
housing rents are rising by up to 4.1%, or £202 a year on average, while
vehicle excise duty is going up by £10 a year. A temporary VAT cut on
hospitality comes to an end on Friday, adding 20p to the price of a pint of
beer.
Businesses
are also facing extreme pressures, particularly from gas prices. Industries
that are particularly energy-intensive, such as ceramics and glass-blowing have
said factories may need to shut down unless they receive some help.
Small
businesses are facing a huge rise in bills, according to the energy analysis
group Cornwall Insight, with some facing cost increases of 250%.
“Unlike
domestic customers, non-domestic customers have yet to see any dedicated
government support to manage the record high energy bills they are facing,”
Cornwall said.
“The
unstable energy market is also seeing suppliers withdraw tariff propositions at
short notice, which is making it harder for business customers to secure the
contracts they need, and may lead to them facing higher costs given the nature
of this volatility.”
The
government is expected to publish an energy security white paper next week,
outlining how the UK will reduce its reliance on foreign imports of oil and
gas.
But the
proposals are not expected to have any impact on the immediate cost pressures
contributing to soaring inflation, such as petrol prices, home heating or
freight costs that drive up prices of food and goods.
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