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CMA sets out energy market changes – Press releases – GOV.UK

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  • CMA sets out energy market changes – Press releases – GOV.UK

    The CMA has today set out proposals to reform the energy market, open up competition and help customers get a better deal. In a summary of its provisional decision on remedies published today, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has set out a comprehensive and wide-ranging package of remedies to…
    Read More -> CMA sets out energy market changes – Press releases – GOV.UK


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  • #2
    Re: CMA sets out energy market changes – Press releases – GOV.UK

    So Capping prepay meter costs ( which all the news appears to be about )
    - Capped to control costs until 2020
    - Headroom of £25 a year
    - the proposed level of the cap as of Q2 2015 is generally in line with the cheapest prepayment tariff prices in many region


    As a 'because I chose to' prepayment meter user I'm a bit concerned firms will try and push you to a billing meter.



    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Transitional price cap for prepayment customers
    133.
    We believe that competitive retail energy markets, in which energy suppliers
    operate free of inefficient technical and regulatory restrictions, and
    customers make informed decisions about the range of choices available to
    them, represent the best long-term approach to delivering positive outcomes
    for energy customers.

    134.
    We have identified substantial problems on both the supply- and the
    demand-side of the retail energy markets, and we believe that our remedies
    package will provide a long-term solution to them, by putting downwards
    pressure on prices towards the competitive benchmark level.

    135.
    However, our proposed remedies will take time to implement before they
    start to address the features that we have identified and, in turn, reduce the
    detriment to domestic customers arising from them. As a result, we expect
    that the detriment arising from the Domestic AECs we have provisionally
    identified will persist in substantial form for the next few years. Given the
    size of the detriment we have observed, of around £1.7 billion a year over
    the last three and a half years, with a marked increase in detriment year on
    year, we have therefore considered the need to intervene to address domestic
    customer detriment directly in this transitional period, through a
    price cap.

    136.
    We have provisionally concluded that a price cap should apply to domestic
    customers on prepayment meters for a transitional period (2017 to the end
    of 2020). In reaching this provisional decision, we have given consideration
    toa number of factors, including: the strength of the features contributing to
    the Prepayment AEC and the Domestic Weak Customer Response AEC as
    it applies to prepayment customers; and the level of detriment suffered by
    prepayment customers.

    137.
    The level of detriment suffered by prepayment customers is particularly high.
    Over the period 2012 to Q2 2015, detriment expressed as a proportion of the
    bill for prepayment customers was substantially higher than that for direct
    debit and standard credit customers for both dual fuel customers and single
    fuel electricity customers, as set out above. Further, we note that, unlike
    other customers, where prepayment customers pay too high a price, part of
    the detriment is likely to be felt in abruptly curtailed consumption.

    138.
    We also consider that a cap covering a relatively restricted proportion of
    customers, such as prepayment customers (about 16% of the total customer
    base), is likely to be less prone to adverse consequences than a cap
    covering a broader group and that the use of an easily identifiable criterion
    for qualification (such as being on a prepayment meter) will help ensure that
    the remedy is easily implementable within a short period of time.

    139.
    We have provisionally decided to implement a ‘reference price and cost
    index approach’ to set the cap for prepayment customers, which would
    involve setting an initial level of the prepayment cap based on our
    competitive benchmark analysis (as discussed above) and then allowing the
    cap to change over time according to movements in exogenous cost indices
    ,including wholesale costs, network costs, policy costs and inflation
    .
    140.
    In considering the design and stringency of the cap, we have been
    particularly mindful of the need to avoid distortions to competition, while
    reducing customer detriment. Notably the design – unlike alternatives we
    considered – does not lead to a risk of perverse incentives on the part of
    suppliers. Further, the fact that the cap is strictly time-limited and will be
    implemented according to an objective formula, will help minimise the risk of
    regulatory gaming behaviour.

    141.
    In determining the overall level of the cap, we have provisionally decided to
    include headroom of £25 per fuel per year (ie £50 headroom in a dual fuel
    cap). This will mitigate the risk that the cap does not allow for the recovery of
    efficient costs and help ensure that competition in the prepayment segments
    can coexist with the cap. Indeed, the proposed level of the cap as of Q2
    2015 is generally in line with the cheapest prepayment tariff prices in
    many regions and we believe that it will be possible for competitive tariffs to
    undercut the level of the cap.

    142.
    At the current proposed level, we anticipate that the cap will materially
    reduce detriment for prepayment customers. Had it applied in Q2 2015, it
    would have reduced prepayment customer detriment – and, equivalently, the
    revenues of the Six Large Energy Firms – by about £300 million per year
    ,equivalent to a reduction in the average bills paid by prepayment customers
    of over 8%.

    143.
    We note that the proposed price cap would also apply to Mid-tier Suppliers
    and smaller suppliers and will therefore result in revenue reductions outside
    of the Six Large Energy Firms. The extent of revenue reductions for each
    supplier will be determined by the level of detriment currently experienced (in
    the form of high prices) by their prepayment customers.

    144.
    We anticipate that, as our remedies to address supply-side constraints and
    improve customer engagement begin to take hold towards the end of the
    cap, and as smart meter roll-out increases, competition rather than the cap
    will be determining the prices paid by most customers. There will therefore
    be a graduated glide path to the termination of the cap at the end of 2020.

    145.
    While the detriment suffered by prepayment customers is particularly high,
    we note that other domestic customers will also suffer detriment during the
    transitional period before full implementation of our remedies, and have
    therefore given consideration to the application of a price cap to broader
    categories of customers, notably all customers on the standard variable
    tariff.

    146.
    Our provisional view is that the costs of attempting to address the detriment
    of all customers on the standard variable tariff through a price cap would
    likely be disproportionate. We believe that attempting to control outcomes for
    the substantial majority of customers would – even during a transitional
    period – run excessive risks of undermining the competitive process, likely
    resulting in worse outcomes for customers in the long run. This risk might
    occur through a combination of reducing the incentives of suppliers to
    compete, reducing the incentives of customers to engage and an increase in
    the perception of regulatory risk.

    147.
    Since, as noted above, a large part of the detriment we have observed in the
    form of high prices is likely due to inefficiency rather than excess profits, we
    believe the best, most sustainable approach to reducing this detriment in the
    long term is through fully competitive markets, in which more efficient
    suppliers gradually replace less efficient suppliers. Having considered very
    closely both the short-term benefits to customers and the longer-term risks
    that a broader cap may create, set against the features of the Domestic
    Weak Customer Response AEC, we have therefore provisionally decided,
    on balance, not to propose an intervention to control prices across all
    customers on standard variable tariffs.
    #staysafestayhome

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    • #3
      Re: CMA sets out energy market changes – Press releases – GOV.UK

      Daily Mail's view - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...suppliers.html

      Under new plans only the most vulnerable would remain on a pre-payment 'smart' meter which would cap rates.
      I can't see that in the report? ( but it is a bit long and tedious)



      Reuters - http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-bri...-idUKKCN0WC0JK
      #staysafestayhome

      Any support I provide is offered without liability, if you are unsure please seek professional legal guidance.

      Received a Court Claim? Read >>>>> First Steps

      Comment

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