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E.On energy supplier to pay record £12m mis-selling penalty | E.On energy supplier to pay record £12m mis-selling penalty |
(35 minutes later) | |
Energy giant E.On is to pay a record £12m penalty following an investigation into mis-selling by the industry regulator. | Energy giant E.On is to pay a record £12m penalty following an investigation into mis-selling by the industry regulator. |
Ofgem has carried out a series of mis-selling probes, and in December imposed a £3.5m penalty on Npower. | Ofgem has carried out a series of mis-selling probes, and in December imposed a £3.5m penalty on Npower. |
E.On's penalty is the biggest supplier pay-out to customers, reflecting the extensive rule breaches, both on the doorstep and telephone. | |
The energy supplier apologised for the "completely unacceptable" failings. | |
E.On will pay around £35 to 333,000 customers who are normally recipients of the Warm Home Discount. | |
It will also write to around 465,000 customers it has identified itself, informing them of how to get in touch to find out whether they were mis-sold to. | |
Ofgem found that E.On had poor sales practices, failed to property train staff, and had insufficient safeguards. | Ofgem found that E.On had poor sales practices, failed to property train staff, and had insufficient safeguards. |
The mis-selling occurred between June 2010 and December 2013. | The mis-selling occurred between June 2010 and December 2013. |
The regulator said that E.On had opportunities to improve its sales practices long before 2013, but its response was inadequate. | |
However, Ofgem said E.On had co-operated fully with its investigation, which began in 2012. | |
No excuses | |
Tony Cocker, chief executive of E.On UK, said it was "completely unacceptable" that sales staff had been unclear with customers about their energy tariff choices. | |
He added: "There was no organised attempt to mislead, and Ofgem has acknowledged this, but that does not excuse the fact we did not have in place enough rules, checks and oversight." | |
Mr Cocker said E.On was completely overhauling its sales processes and had already ended doorstep sales and telephone cold calling. | |
Sarah Harrison, senior partner in charge of enforcement at Ofgem said: "The time is right to draw a line under past supplier bad behaviour and truly rebuild trust so consumers are put at the heart of the energy market. | Sarah Harrison, senior partner in charge of enforcement at Ofgem said: "The time is right to draw a line under past supplier bad behaviour and truly rebuild trust so consumers are put at the heart of the energy market. |
"E.ON has today taken a good step by accepting responsibility for its actions and putting proper redress in place." | "E.ON has today taken a good step by accepting responsibility for its actions and putting proper redress in place." |
The energy watchdog has imposed nearly £100m in fines and redress on energy companies for various rule breaches over the last four years, £39m of which have been for mis-selling. | |
Have you been affected by issues covered in this story? You can email us at haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk using the subject line 'E.ON mis-selling'. |