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Scots given water bills hope as energy prices keep rising

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Published Date: 25 June 2008
WATER bills in Scotland are likely to rise by less than the rate of inflation over the next six years, a report claimed today.
The Water Industry Commission for Scotland said that trends would keep average bills around £15 lower than those south of the border.

The forecast comes as one piece of good news amid warnings to householders that the cost of fuel could soar by as
much as 40 per cent this year.

The bosses of the UK's biggest energy firms yesterday told MPs prices were likely to rise steeply due to rocketing wholesale gas costs.

They told the Commons Business and Enterprise Select Committee the energy companies were facing "a seismic shift in commodity prices".

And old folks' charities Help The Aged and Age Concern have called for a £50 million rebate for pensioners this winter amid fears that 800,000 older households could be dragged into poverty if prices do rise as dramatically as predicted.

Scottish Water announced in March that water prices would rise this year by 3.74 per cent – 0.5 per cent below the Retail Price Index inflation rate.

That puts water bills in Scotland at £310, around £20 lower than the average for England and Wales, and among the lowest in the UK.

And today, the Water Industry Commission for Scotland said the trend was likely to continue.

The commission looked at how Scottish Water had coped amid a climate of rising utility bills over the past year.

It found that costs were £5 million lower than had been expected when charges were set in 2005.

Chairman of the commission Sir Ian Byatt welcomed the way Scottish Water had tried to meet challenges.

He said: "If Scottish Water sustains its current good performance in reducing costs, we expect that household water bills could continue to rise by less than inflation during 2010-14."

Business Stream, Scottish Water's retail arm, has already achieved savings, the report said.

The commission said Tesco had saved £1m more quickly across its Scottish operations because of the service it received.

Gas and electricity prices, in contrast, have already risen significantly and are predicted to increase further.

Consumer watchdog Energywatch estimates the average dual fuel customer is now paying nearly 15 per cent more for gas and electricity after the latest round of price increases earlier this year.

At yesterday's Commons committee, Sam Laidlaw, chief executive of British Gas parent company Centrica, defended his company's £1.2 billion profits and said accusations of "fat cat earnings" were unfair.

He said: "We need to make a return in this business because we need to invest in new sources of gas for the UK."





The full article contains 455 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 25 June 2008 9:47 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scottish Water
 
1

wattie>x 1,

PLYMOUTH 25/06/2008 12:27:29
Living in an area with the highest water charges in the UK with a company that never ceases to continue to increase their charges annually;I would advise the people of Scotland to beware off the nonsense preached almost daily by these companies about cheap water. Their main aim is to churn out profit for their fat cat directors and their greedy shareholders and eventually get every consumer on to a meter distribution, similar to that off Gas and Electricity.
BEWARE!
2

MisterN,

Scotland 25/06/2008 12:47:36
It depends on what level they are going to claim is the rate of inflation. They seem to change it depending on whether they have to pay out or receive payment.
3

Spicey,

Glasgow 25/06/2008 13:31:32
"Scottish Water announced in March that water prices would rise this year by 3.74 per cent – 0.5 per cent below the Retail Price Index inflation rate."

Exactly #2. Yet somehow Ian Swanson didnt notice. This is a load of b*llocks, prices will actually rise by 0.34% ABOVE inflation! Seriously, i have seen some rubbish reporting but this really takes the biscuit. Did you even read the press release you were handed before you copied and pasted it into your 'article'.

"Chairman of the commission Sir Ian Byatt welcomed the way Scottish Water had *tried to meet challenges*."

* read - managed to pull the wool over the eyes of dimwitted journalist who has no comprehension of what he is writing about.

Idiot.
4

Spicey,

Glasgow 25/06/2008 14:31:40
"The Water Industry Commission for Scotland said that trends would keep average bills around £15 lower than those south of the border."

"That puts water bills in Scotland at £310, around £20 lower than the average for England and Wales, and among the lowest in the UK."

Surely your job as a jounalist would be to as least achnowledge the discrepency between these two figures and suggest why these figures from these 2 different bodies are different.

And you complain about politicians not working for a living, when you live off the scraps they give you without questioning anything.
5

Spicey,

Glasgow 25/06/2008 15:05:58
I have to assume that Ian spends all his time networking instead of actually writing, because i cannot actually find a related article in a (admittedly brief) search of other newspapers.

Perhaps once hes found interesting information he might want to challenge it however, and do some follow up investigating on it.
6

wattie>x 1,

PLYMOUTH 25/06/2008 17:59:04
As an elderly pensioner on pension credit; my annuual water bill for the year which ended last April 2008 was £666.50.
You listen to the garbage that is fed to us almost daily through the media, lying politicians etc. and you will do so at your peril and will later come to regret it!
7

Agent 99,

25/06/2008 18:51:53
[6] What are you doing with it all then?

If the average Scottish bill is £310 and English ones are £20 more, you're paying twice the average. Of course, that's if you believe anything an EEN journo writes.

Stop drinking it, beer would be cheaper.
8

The Geniune Mario Antionette,

25/06/2008 22:00:00
Its all water under the bridge
9

Fairfax,

26/06/2008 11:52:41
Spicey (3): "This is a load of b*llocks, prices will actually rise by 0.34% ABOVE inflation!"

It depends on which inflation measure is being used -- after all, inflation is a statistic, not a physical variable. It's above the CPI but below the RPI. The CPI omits house price changes but is the inflation target used by the Bank of England, following Brown's order to move to this index some years back. The RPI includes rising house prices (and there are some technical differences too, whose main effect is that the RPI is more sensitive to large changes in the prices of a single item). The RPI is the index used by most unions in wage claims.

 

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