UK Utilities Called Upon to Return Billions Paid Due to Regulatory 'Blunder'
May 30 2019 - 5:56AM
Dow Jones News
--Consumer charity Citizen's Advice has called on utility
companies to pay compensation for excessive fees
--Citizen's Advice claims consumers overpaid GBP24 billion in
the last fifteen years due to regulatory errors in setting price
controls
--U.K. utility companies are currently facing increased
regulation and the threat of renationalization under a potential
Labour government
By Adam Clark
The U.K's under-pressure utilities companies face a fresh threat
after consumer charity Citizen's Advice said they should pay
compensation for billions of pounds worth of excessive bills due to
errors by regulators.
Citizen's Advice said Thursday it had calculated water, energy,
broadband and telephone networks overcharged customers a collective
24 billion pounds ($30 billion) over the last fifteen years because
regulators made errors in setting price controls.
Forecasting errors over debt costs and investor risk led to
GBP13 billion in overpayments in the water industry and GBP11
billion in the energy sector, according to Citizen's Advice.
"Companies need to play their part in putting this multi-billion
pound blunder right. They must compensate customers where they have
been paying over the odds. If they don't government needs to
intervene," Gillian Guy, chief executive of Citizen's Advice,
said.
British utility stocks are already being weighed down by
increased regulation and the threat of renationalization. At the
start of this year, energy regulator Ofgem brought in a price cap
after the ruling Conservative government promised to tackle
"rip-off" fees. Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the opposition Labour
party, has said he would nationalize water, electricity and gas
companies.
British regulators said they had already set out plans to cut
consumer costs.
"While we do not agree with Citizens Advice's estimate of excess
profits, we welcome their report and recommendations. We will
continue to work closely with them and wider stakeholders to apply
lessons learnt from previous price controls for the next price
control period. Our plans include the lowest ever returns for
investors in energy networks which would cut costs for consumers by
GBP6 billion," Ofgem said.
Water regulator Ofwat also said it welcomed the report and it
has made changes to the way it sets the cost of capital.
"As we set the price review for the five years from 2020 we
expect to see prices continue to fall before inflation and a step
change in performance for customers and the environment," Ofwat
said.
Write to Adam Clark at adam.clark@dowjones.com;
@AdamDowJones
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 30, 2019 05:41 ET (09:41 GMT)
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