British Gas courts controversy with 31 per cent rise in profits
It said operating profits jumped to £574m in 2015 thanks to higher energy demand, although wider group underlying earnings at owner Centrica fell 12 per cent to £1.46bn.
The results come a week after British Gas became one of the last Big Six providers to lower gas prices in the recent round of reductions, with a 5.1 per cent decrease from March 16.
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Hide AdThe industry has been criticised for being slow to pass on falls in wholesale gas prices, with consumer groups hitting out at the size and timing of cuts.
British Gas said it saw a five per cent hike in gas usage despite the warmest December on record, as last year overall saw more normal temperatures compared with an exceptionally mild 2014.
Profits were also boosted thanks to lower energy efficiency scheme costs.
The group lost 119,000 customer accounts to reach 14.6 million over last year despite cutting gas prices three times since the start of 2015, with the latest announcement coming after reductions last February and August.
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Hide AdThe Big Six suppliers have only reduced gas prices over the past year, while the majority of the latest round of cuts do not take effect until after winter, which has angered consumer groups.
Ann Robinson, director of consumer policy at uSwitch.com, said: "Hearing news of rising profits when wholesale energy prices have tumbled will leave many British Gas customers wondering if they're being treated fairly.
"British Gas has cut standard gas prices three times in the last past year, but it should now go further and reduce electricity bills too."
Iain Conn, chief executive of Centrica, insisted the group was passing on reductions in wholesale markets.
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Hide AdHe said: "We absolutely have passed on the low costs of commodity prices as they fell to our customers.
"The reason the profits went up in 2015 versus 2014 actually is very simple. It's about the weather and about consumption. And we saw a very mild 2014 and we saw a more normal 2015 and therefore the amount of energy that our customers used went up and therefore the actual total profit went up."
The wider Centrica business was impacted by plunging commodity prices, with the cost of oil more than 70 per cent below peaks seen in the summer of 2014.
The group is slashing costs to deliver savings of £750m over five years, announcing last July that it would cut 6,000 posts across the group - around 10 per cent of its workforce - although 2,000 new jobs will be created, so the net loss will be 4,000.
It said 2,000 job losses have already been announced, with another 3,000 expected to go this year.