Skip to main content
Experts back renewable energy drive as bills set to rise again by 5% in April
An online energy bill

AVERAGE household energy bills will likely rise by 5 per cent in April, energy consultancy Cornwall Insight said today.

The group said it expects regulator Ofgem to increase the energy price cap by £85 to £1,823 for a typical household, due to an increase in wholesale gas prices across Europe.

Warm this Winter spokeswoman Caroline Simpson warned that the public is largely unaware that electricity bills are chained to gas prices.

“This over reliance on gas, both for our heating and in setting the electricity price, is why we saw huge hikes in bills four years ago and why prices are set to rise again,” she said.

“Instead, the public are being told by some politicians that net-zero and green policies are to blame, which couldn’t be further from the truth — we need to stop gaslighting people.

“Our bills are high and the ones who benefit are greedy gas and oil companies making billions.”

End Fuel Poverty Coalition co-ordinator Simon Francis said: “As volatile energy bills continue to be set by our reliance on global wholesale markets and driven by the cost of gas, it is even more vital that we see moves towards sustainable, cheaper, renewable energy.”

Ofgem is set to next confirm its quarterly price cap next Tuesday, February 25.

Fuel Poverty Action’s Jonathan Bean said: “Ofgem has signed off on profits for shareholders and huge pay packets for energy bosses — but when it comes to protecting us from being ripped off, they’re nowhere to be seen.

“They've failed to scrap cruel standing charges despite the clear verdict of their own consultation, and failed to tackle hugely inflated electricity prices — four times more expensive than gas.”

National Energy Action chief executive Adam Scorer called for further action from the government, including additional targeted energy bill support through a social tariff or an expanded Warm Home Discount, a help-to-repay scheme to support households out of debt and for the government’s Warm Homes Plan.

The Department for Energy said that rising energy bills are a “direct result of Britain’s vulnerability to volatile global gas markets” and that the only way to bring down bills for good is by making Britain a “clean energy superpower.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You can read five articles for free every month,
but please consider supporting us by becoming a subscriber.
More from this author
Demonstrators hold flags as they cross Westminster Bridge during a demonstration in support of the Palestinian people in Gaza, in London, May 17, 2025
Britain / 18 May 2025
18 May 2025

Thousands fill London streets on 77th anniversary of catastrophe as the Co-op supermarket AGM votes to stop selling Israeli goods

An elderly woman holding pound coins in her hands, in Poole,
Winter Fuel Payments / 18 May 2025
18 May 2025
A fire engine leaves Bicester Motion in Oxfordshire where two firefighters and a member of the public have died, and two firefighters were also seriously injured, May 16, 2025
Bicester Motion Fire / 16 May 2025
16 May 2025
Similar stories
Unite members take part in a day of action for Energy4All in
Britain / 1 April 2025
1 April 2025
Energy giants rake in half a trillion pounds out of people’s misery, campaigners warn
An online energy bill
Britain / 20 February 2025
20 February 2025