Leekbrookgull
Well-known member
Much discussion on R5 and with standing charges increasing seems to me giving in one hand but taking out of the other.
According to this (an excerpt from an article by M Lewis) …it’s increasing by £3 ….that’s not to say it didn’t go up again in the July one (did it?)Much discussion on R5 and with standing charges increasing seems to me giving in one hand but taking out of the other.
thats how standing charges work-the costs to the network providers (national grid etc) remain the samr to the supplier whether or not you are drawing gas or electric, im not saying they arent too high, just pointing out why you are charged even though you havenmt used any electric or gas.The standing charge is a joke. I was away for 3 weeks and switched my electricity off and have still been billed £10.50 in standing charges for that period of time.
Yes, I am aware that is how the standing charge works. My issue is that it is not how it SHOULD work.thats how standing charges work-the costs to the network providers (national grid etc) remain the samr to the supplier whether or not you are drawing gas or electric, im not saying they arent too high, just pointing out why you are charged even though you havenmt used any electric or gas.
did u switch freezer and fridge off though? -if so does the extra energy required to get the temperature back to operating level make it worth while? and the inconvienience of running down the freezer and fridge so food doesnt spoil seems a bit of a ball ache for very little gain in saving the cost of keeping fridge/freezer going
Why shouldn't it work like that? -forget the pence per day cost which is a different matter but the reason for the charge itself- supply companies have costs from the network operators, green levies etc that are charged for each supply that is connected to that network and are not related to the energy used. It matters not if that supply is used or not- the supplier still gets charged for that connected meter. (it covers the cost of the infrastrucure, repairs, etc-its not cheap replacing broken pipes, or power cables brought down by falling trees etc)Yes, I am aware that is how the standing charge works. My issue is that it is not how it SHOULD work.
Most days, it makes up over 50% of my total daily charge. That cannot be right and should either be capped or charged as a percentage of a person’s total usage.
I emptied my fridge and freezer before going away, so it was not a ball ache. Haven’t put anything back in the freezer yet so it is still off.
I think the standing charge is as high as it is because we're all now covering the costs incurred when many of the small providers with sketchy business plans went out of business as prices rose.
I understand why that has to be done, but it feels a little bit unfair that those that stuck with the legacy providers are having to bail out those who repeatedly jumped from deal to deal to save money. Again, I understand why people did that, and supplier-switching was essentially encouraged by price comparison sites and Money Savings Expert etc.