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Six in 10 Londoners 'keep heating turned down' to save on fuel bills

Published by Jon Land for 24dash.com in Housing and also in Bill Payments
Tuesday 26th January 2010 - 12:13pm

Six in 10 Londoners 'keep heating turned down' to save on fuel bills Six in 10 Londoners 'keep heating turned down' to save on fuel bills

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Touching that thermostat may infuriate partners but a new poll has shown that six in 10 Londoners are living in colder homes than they would like this winter in a desperate bid to cut sky-high fuel bills.
 
The YouGov survey, commissioned by the National Housing Federation, also found that 21% of Londoners are living in fuel poverty - where customers pay more than 10% of their monthly income on gas and electricity bills.
 
Belinda Porich, head of the Federation’s London region, said: “Heating has become a luxury for many in London, particularly the elderly, low paid and unemployed. Not so long ago a luxury was a weekend away. Now it’s heating your home for a couple of hours.”
 
The poll also found widespread support for the idea that London’s prepay meter customers - amongst those hardest hit by the economic downturn - should not have to pay for supplying and maintaining their meters. Almost seven in 10 Londoners (69%) who pay for the cost of their own heating agreed with this idea.
 
British Gas has heaped further misery on its prepay customers by charging them a premium of up to £40 a year more for gas than those paying their bills quarterly. British Gas’ competitors have all scrapped their unpopular prepay surcharges following criticism over rip off prices.
 
Belinda Porich said: “British Gas should come out of the cold and stop discriminating against some of its poorest customers. It should scrap its hugely unpopular prepay premium and start charging them the same as its quarterly billed customers. Energy suppliers have a legitimate right to fit meters to recover debts, but to then penalise hard up people by forcing them to pay higher prices for their energy is an outrage.”
 
Almost one in two Londoners (47%) thought the energy regulator Ofgem had done a poor or very poor job of protecting vulnerable customers.
 
 

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