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Britons warned energy bills could jump another 40% in October
Image: Pixabay

The UK energy regulator warned on Tuesday (May 24) that household energy bills in Britain look set to surge by another 40% in October. This will deepen a cost-of-living crisis that is piling pressure on the government to do more to help the poorest.

Ofgem said its price cap on the most-widely used tariffs could reach 2,800 pounds ($3,499) when it is next reviewed in October.

That would be up 42% from the current 1,971 pound cap announced in April, which was itself a more than 50% rise on the previous level.

Ofgem Chief Executive Officer Jonathan Brearley told a parliamentary committee: "We are only part-way through the price cap window but we are expecting a price cap in October in the region of 2,800 pounds."

Everyday life in London city, UK (Photo: Pixabay)

If confirmed, the cap would be higher than forecasts from Cornwall Insight, which had previously showed analysts expected it to rise to an average of 2,595 pounds a year.

The increase would add to stresses Britons are already feeling from a spike in the cost of most essentials from food to fuel, ramping up the pressure on Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government

Boris Johnson: No option is off the table to tackle cost of living

Rachel Reeves, the opposition Labour Party's finance spokesperson, said: "This will cause enormous worry for families already facing soaring bills. We need an emergency budget now, with a windfall tax on oil and gas producer profits to lower bills."

Business minister Kwasi Kwarteng said he did not think a windfall tax was necessarily the right thing to do, but he was "very confident" there would more government intervention to help consumers before October.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine: Considerable rise of the cost of living in Britain

Global gas prices soared last year when reopening of world economies from pandemic lockdowns caused demand to return sharply and supply could not keep up, while the war in Ukraine has pushed up prices further in 2022.

Brearley said: "The price changes in the gas market are genuinely a once in a generation event - not seen since the oil crisis in the 1970s."

Source: Ise