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UK cuts household energy bills to 150 pounds per year

Finance Minister Rachel Reeves announced on Wednesday that Britain would reduce energy bills in the UK by an average of 150 pounds ($198.23). This will be achieved by shifting some costs into general taxation, and by cutting a scheme for helping to pay for home improvement.

Reeves stated that the Energy Company Obligation will be abolished in April 2026. This obligation, which requires energy companies to fund measures such as insulation and new heating system for low-income homes, is a measure that forces them to pay.

Last month, the National Audit Office raised concerns about possible fraud and low-quality work undertaken by the ECO programme.

Green groups criticised the decision to abolish it entirely rather than reform it.

Ami McCarthy (Greenpeace UK, head of politics) said that cutting the insulation program and funding could leave millions of households trapped in cold and damp homes.

Budget documents revealed that 75% of the Renewables Obligation cost, which is used to pay for renewable energy production, will be transferred to general taxes in order further reduce the energy bill.

The price cap set by the regulator Ofgem is expected to rise by around 12% in January compared to the 1,568 pounds per year it was when Labour took power in July 2024.

(source: Reuters)