Kev Young 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

9.8K posts

Kev Young 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 banner
Kev Young 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

Kev Young 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

@kevc307

Dundee United Season Ticket holder. Utd born and bred. Manchester United the Religious belief. Full member of 45 SNP

Edinburgh Katılım Aralık 2012
451 Takip Edilen279 Takipçiler
Cantona Collars AKA Larry
Cantona Collars AKA Larry@Cantona_Collars·
14 years ago today – Paul Scholes scored this beauty against QPR.
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ToddHoffman
ToddHoffman@goldrushtodd·
Where in Gods green earth did you find your prime minister? Were you looking for the kid who got left out on the playground, then tried to be the teachers pet? @UnitedKingdom
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Ed Miliband
Ed Miliband@Ed_Miliband·
2/ Average annual energy bills remain high due to Britain’s dependence on fossil fuel markets, which spiked after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
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Ed Miliband
Ed Miliband@Ed_Miliband·
1/ Energy bills remain too high for families - that is why this Government is taking urgent action to help people with their energy bills. This winter, one in five families will get the £150 off their bills through the Warm Home Discount.
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Martin Lewis
Martin Lewis@MartinSLewis·
The headline is @Ofgem's energy Price Cap for the 3mths starting 1 Jan is to RISE 0.2% but that's only part of the story, elec costs are to rise a real amount while gas falls, and yet again the hated standing charges are rising. Here's the average UK direct debit rates: - Elec unit rates 27.69p/kwh (was 26.35p) up +5.1% - Elec standing charges 54.75p/day (was 53.68p) up2.0% - Gas unit rates 5.93p/kwH (was 6.29p) down 5.7% - Gas standing charges 35.09p/day (was 34.03p) up 3.1% So those on the Price Cap (all those on standard tariffs, ie if you've not fixed or got a special deal) with high electricity use and low or no gas use will see their bills rise by three or four percent come 1 Jan. These changes are not caused by an increase in wholesale costs, as normal (which is why the prediction had been down 0.5%ish) as they went down over the three month assessment period, but by a mix of policy and network costs ie cost for nuclear, costs for linking up networks, cost of warm home discount. Electricity is seen as more universal so when they want to add policy costs to bills, they do it there, yet that is somewhat perverse as it means we see a relative increase in electricity costs compared to gas, when the whole policy driver is to move people off gas. The best move for most people is to get onto a comparison site like cheapenergyclub.com and find yourself a cheap fix (though im hearing a couple of cheaper tariffs may launch next week so you may want to hold until then) which are currently 10% less than price cap (especially as april cap predicted to rise 4 to 5%). Also some good time of use and EV tariffs too.
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