This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/jul/31/british-gas-fall-in-energy-bills-centrica

The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
British Gas predicts fall in energy bills British Gas predicts fall in energy bills
(about 4 hours later)
Household bills at British Gas will will be around £90 lower this year than in 2013, thanks to mild weather and a freeze on energy prices. Household bills at British Gas will be around £90 lower this year than in 2013, thanks to mild weather and a freeze on energy prices.
Parent company Centrica blamed the weather for a 35% drop in overall operating profits to £1.03bn in the first half of the year, with British Gas residential profits falling by 26% to £265m. Also taking a toll was the Polar Vortex, "extremely cold weather" in North America which wreaked havoc in wholesale markets and cost the company an extra $110m. The company is predicting a return to growth next year. Parent company Centrica blamed the warm weather in Britain for a 35% drop in overall operating profits to £1.03bn in the first half of the year, with British Gas residential profits falling by 26% to £265m. Also taking a toll was the Polar Vortex, "extremely cold weather" in North America which wreaked havoc in wholesale markets and cost the company an extra $110m (£). Centrica, which issued three profit warnings earlier this year when it was losing an average of 2,200 customers a day, is predicting a return to growth next year. It said customer numbers have now stabilised.
Britain's largest energy supplier said the warm weather had reduced the average household's consumpion of gas by 24%, which is likely to result in a £90 drop in the average British Gas bill this year from 2013 (a 7% fall). It put energy prices up by 9% last November and cut them by 5% in January as wholesale costs fell, leaving prices 4% higher than last year on a net basis. Following a similar pledge from rival SSE, Centrica vowed in May not to raise prices again this year.
Asked whether there was scope to cut prices, Nick Luff, the finance director, declined to comment before adding: "That's always the case. The wholesale cost of gas is clearly lower than it was."
Rick Haythornwaite, the chairman, said: "The first half of the year has seen challenging market conditions across the group, both as a result of the weather and reflecting the wider political environment. We have continued our efforts to engage with our stakeholders, particularly our customers, working to restore their trust. And we are taking the steps to position the business for growth in 2015 and beyond."Rick Haythornwaite, the chairman, said: "The first half of the year has seen challenging market conditions across the group, both as a result of the weather and reflecting the wider political environment. We have continued our efforts to engage with our stakeholders, particularly our customers, working to restore their trust. And we are taking the steps to position the business for growth in 2015 and beyond."
Centrica said it expects the average British Gas domestic bill to be £90, or 7% lower in 2014 than last year, and expects to make a profit of £40 per household (£51 before tax) 20% lower than last year. Chief executive Sam Laidlaw is leaving at the end of the year and will be replaced by BP refining boss Iain Conn, who is taking on one of the toughest jobs in the business. Centrica and other energy companies have been accused of profiteering as household bills soared in recent years, and the new watchdog, the Competition and Markets Authority, has launched its widest investigation into the sector to date, which will take up up to two years to complete.
Centrica's chief executive Sam Laidlaw is leaving at the end of the year and will be replaced by BP refining boss Iain Conn, who is taking on one of the toughest jobs in the business. Centrica and other energy companies have been accused of profiteering as household bills have soared in recent years, and the new watchdog, the Competition and Markets Authority, has launched its widest investigation into the sector to date. Energy regulator Ofgem is now predicting that suppliers will double their profit margins and make a profit of £106 a household over the next 12 months.
Ofgem is predicting that energy suppliers will make a profit of £106 a household over the next 12 months almost 5% more than it forecast a month ago. Luff said: "It's hard to see that in our results that we published this morning." Centrica expects to make a profit of £40 per household (£51 before tax) in 2014 20% lower than last year. He suggested that Ofgem had been wrong in the past and noted that Centrica's forecast was based on actual consumption whereas the Ofgem used a "theoretical model".
Meanwhile, Jonathan Reynolds, Labour's shadow energy and climate change minister, said: "Ofgem's forecasts for the industry for the next 12 months is just the latest example of an energy market that is not working. Britain's hard-pressed bill payers have seen their energy bills rocket, despite falling wholesale costs.
"That is why Labour would freeze energy bills until 2017 so prices cannot rise, and create a tough new watchdog with the power to force energy companies to cut their prices when wholesale costs fall"
Luff said Centrica has had meetings with the CMA and stressed that the company was "not fearful" of the outcome of the investigation, which could lead to the Big Six suppliers being broken up. He noted that Centrica had put three gas-fired power stations up for sale two months ago. "We are confident our business model works."
Luff, who is also leaving the company after seven years at Laidlaw's side, said defiantly he "wouldn't go back and change anything" – despite mounting criticism from fuel poverty campaigners in recent years. "We coped with quite dramatic changes in the shape of the energy market."
Centrica is in talks with the government amid growing fears that the west's stand-off with Russia over Ukraine could undermine an important power deal, the Guardian revealed on Wednesday. Under the contract, estimated to be worth hundreds of millions of pounds, gas from state-owned Gazprom is scheduled to start flowing from October. Luff played down the size of the contract, saying Centrica had "much bigger contracts" with Norway's Statoil and Qatargas.