Thousands of Yorkshire households will have lower energy bills after cabinet decision

The cabinet has decided to reduce the District Heating unit charge and save money for more than a thousand households in Rotherham.

In March, the cabinet approved the increased charges to 20.68 pence per kWh for 2023/24 in alignment with the government’s energy price guarantee.

The current proposal sees a decrease from the approved charge to 15.94 pence per kWh as the previously agreed unit charge now exceeds the Energy Price Guarantee and the Office of Gas and Electricity Markets (Ofgem) price cap for July 2023 onwards.

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In a supporting document, it was added that “weekly prepayment charges are reduced by 59% to 67% depending on property size” and the charge “should be backdated” to April 3, of this year.

Cabinet decides to lower energy bills for more than a thousand properties in RotherhamCabinet decides to lower energy bills for more than a thousand properties in Rotherham
Cabinet decides to lower energy bills for more than a thousand properties in Rotherham

This means that for residents on pre-payment meters, a credit based on their actual usage between April 3 and July 31, 2023, will be applied to the heat meter in early August 2023.

The change will affect all 1,260 properties in the council’s 18 District Heating schemes.

In a Cabinet meeting this morning, Rotherham Council Leader Cllr Chris Read said: “I can’t remember the time we’ve had to change the District Heating charges but it reflects, I think, the uncertainty in the energy market that we’ve all felt in our bills.

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“When we set the charges the usual way back in March, we were near the end of the procurement that the council buys gas upfront in order to fuel the District Heating schemes.

“The prices were exceptionally high at the moment in time. We took a view that rather than pass the full cost of those increases onto District Heating users we would cap the amount they had to pay effectively the same rate that the government [set] for anybody else.”

This, he added, left the council with a budget deficit of approximately £2m (a document shows an operational deficit of £2.59m).