Hundreds of thousands who live off-grid face
winter with no energy bill support
UK households without domestic energy supply contract,
such as those living in caravans and boats, will not receive £400 in October
Diane
Taylor
Mon 5 Sep
2022 07.00 BST
While
millions of households fear government support for energy bills will not be
enough to get them through the cold weather, hundreds of thousands of people who
live off-grid are worried they will have no help at all.
The
government response to a consultation exercise into the energy bills support
scheme (EBSS) , through which households are given £400 towards their bills
from October, admitted there was a problem for households without a domestic
energy supply contract.
The
document from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy
published on 29 July, states: “Evidence suggests up to 400,000 would not
receive EBSS support due to these circumstances compared with approximately 29
million that will.”
Gypsies and
Travellers fear missing out on energy bills support and the National Bargee
Travellers Association says thousands of “liveaboard” boaters could be locked
out of the support payments.
Dan Hooper,
an environmental activist nicknamed Swampy, who achieved prominence for his
tunnel protest activities, lives off-grid in Tipi Valley, a 200-acre former
farm in Wales.
He and
others in the community generate sustainable electricity from solar panels
supplemented by bottled gas and wood burners for heating in the cold winter
months. Bottled gas prices have risen by 40% in the past 12 months.
“Government
should not allow the energy companies to charge these extortionate prices and
make so many people miserable while they are making record-breaking profits.
It’s all about human greed. We need to consume less,” he said.
He added
that while he has some protection because his home is extremely well insulated,
“Everyone should get these payments, which could be used to help people get
their energy in more sustainable ways such as from solar panels.”
For Terry
Green, a Traveller living with members of his family in a caravan park in East
Sussex, the energy price hike has come as a “big shock”. He lives in a caravan
with his wife. His three children and his grandchildren live in other caravans
on the site.
“We’ve
lived on this site for four years. It’s one of the best sites I’ve been on and
I wake up every morning and thank God when I see my children and grandchildren
around me. But when we add up the increased cost of paying our electricity key
meter and bottles of gas I don’t know if we can afford it.
“A lot of
Travellers will have to go back to the old ways of cooking outside on an open
fire. Why should we be forced to do that? We should have equal rights with
everyone else. Greed has crept in. It’s ruining the world.”
Friends,
Families and Travellers, which supports Gypsy and Traveller communities, has
written to ministers highlighting the “astronomically high energy costs”
associated with living in mobile homes, caravans and boats.
Mobile home
and caravan sites that provide energy for residents on the site are classed as
commercial rather than domestic energy users so are not subjected to the energy
price cap, making energy even more expensive for people living there.
Nick Brown
of the National Bargee Travellers Association said that although about 95% of
liveaboard boaters use solar panels to generate electricity most are reliant on
petrol or diesel for heating during the winter months.
“At the
moment we don’t fall within the scope of the government energy grant. We are
encouraging government to include people living off-grid in the scheme. We are
getting calls left, right and centre from boaters saying: ‘How am I going to
manage?”
Matt Smith,
a barber, lives on a boat moored on the canal close to London’s King’s Cross.
“The
approach the government has taken to people like us about the energy crisis is
pretty disappointing,” he said. “I’ve lived on the boat with my girlfriend for
almost two years and it’s fantastic. It’s the best decision we’ve ever made.
“We are
both self-employed so when we can’t work because we’re ill we don’t get paid.
We will struggle to pay the increased fuel prices to use our burner during the
months of December, January and February.
“Many
people who live on boats are older people, disabled people and single mothers.
They are on very low incomes and will struggle even more than we will. Living
on a boat is an environmentally sustainable way to live but it almost seems as
if we’re being punished by government for this way of life. We pay our taxes,
we are still human beings and we need light and heat like everyone else.”
A
government spokesperson said: “Direct support will continue to reach people’s
pockets in the weeks and months ahead, targeted at those who need it most like
low-incomes households, pensioners and those with disabilities. As part of our
£37bn package of help for households, one in four of all UK households will see
£1,200 extra support, provided in instalments across the year.”

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