KZNSeagull
Well-known member
Just to cheer us all up, the people that produced this estimate today have said that these high prices are not a short term spike and may well be with us for the next 3 years.
Why is it so expensive in England?
I live in a mountain town in Canada, a good distance from any major city.
A 2 bed, 1000 sq ft apartment costs under 400 pounds per year for water, electricity and heating combined.
Considering the heating is on 24/7 for 3 months of the year when the temps are consistently in the negative.
A rough approximate going by the above figures, would result in a small/modest sized home around 2000 sq ft would cost under a grand per year all in, here anyway.
What is it that’s resulting in such incredibly high costs in comparison?
This might sound stupid but is that 4200 a MONTH?
Why is it so expensive in England?
I live in a mountain town in Canada, a good distance from any major city.
A 2 bed, 1000 sq ft apartment costs under 400 pounds per year for water, electricity and heating combined.
Considering the heating is on 24/7 for 3 months of the year when the temps are consistently in the negative.
A rough approximate going by the above figures, would result in a small/modest sized home around 2000 sq ft would cost under a grand per year all in, here anyway.
What is it that’s resulting in such incredibly high costs in comparison?
Why is it so expensive in England?
I live in a mountain town in Canada, a good distance from any major city.
A 2 bed, 1000 sq ft apartment costs under 400 pounds per year for water, electricity and heating combined.
Considering the heating is on 24/7 for 3 months of the year when the temps are consistently in the negative.
A rough approximate going by the above figures, would result in a small/modest sized home around 2000 sq ft would cost under a grand per year all in, here anyway.
What is it that’s resulting in such incredibly high costs in comparison?
european gas price, from war and energy policy. and a boat load of regulation, taxs and costs that dont exist in north america. you're probably getting a dollop of subsidy in remote Canada too.
https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/eu-natural-gas
Why does the increase vary so much across Europe though? How come the UK price rise is 150%, we’ll over twice that of Germany and way more than France?
Why is it so expensive in England?
I live in a mountain town in Canada, a good distance from any major city.
A 2 bed, 1000 sq ft apartment costs under 400 pounds per year for water, electricity and heating combined.
Considering the heating is on 24/7 for 3 months of the year when the temps are consistently in the negative.
A rough approximate going by the above figures, would result in a small/modest sized home around 2000 sq ft would cost under a grand per year all in, here anyway.
What is it that’s resulting in such incredibly high costs in comparison?
Why does the increase vary so much across Europe though? How come the UK price rise is 150%, we’ll over twice that of Germany and way more than France?
If it was nationalised, wouldn't UK power, or whatever, be buying on a national/international market, where extraction and energy producers are selling? Isn't that where the actual genuine competition/market is, not with me choosing between various billing companies?
Ouch…I’m currently living in a parallel universe having ‘fixed’ nearly two years ago …reality hits on November 20th when it ends
Sounds crazy. Happy to live where water and heating is included in the rent (as it usually is in Sweden). Electricity will be more expensive but unless you're running a Internet cafe in the basement, £4200 is just not happening.
Not entirely in electricity. This all comes from the national grid and the price is driven by UK demand and the generating capacity that can satisfy it. Demand too much electricity and more expensive generation is used ie fossil fuels. The exception is that when European demand is high they also call on UK supply through interconnectors. This can happen eg when there are problems with French nuclear generation.Gas is priced closer to international markets although we are a lot more self sufficient than eg Germany. Privatization would make little difference to the price UK plc pays for its power and gas but would cut out an unnecessary middleman. That middleman isn’t driving the high bills though. Russia is the cause.
As a follow up we are actually becoming a net exporter of gas to the EU, especially this Summer and that is driving our gas prices higher. Ironically there is talk of pipeline closures because of dust in filters. This would trap gas in the UK and serve to dampen prices. My point is we are in a much better position than Germany.
As a follow up we are actually becoming a net exporter of gas to the EU, especially this Summer and that is driving our gas prices higher. Ironically there is talk of pipeline closures because of dust in filters. This would trap gas in the UK and serve to dampen prices. My point is we are in a much better position than Germany.
Anyone else concerned?
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So if the UK has so much gas….why doesn’t the government do something about trapping it in the country…and as you suggest bringing the price down?