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Trade bodies challenge Ofgem to take action on hidden energy costs

Trade associations from retail, hospitality and social care have signed an open letter organised by leading not-for-profit energy consultancy Box Power CIC challenging the energy regulator Ofgem to take “immediate” action on hidden charges by energy brokers.

Businesses that use brokers could be seeing thousands of pounds more on their bill because of extortionate commission fees.

The letter – which has been signed by the British Retail Consortium, the NFRN, the ACS, British Independent Retailers’ Association – says the problem has been allowed to continue unchecked for too long and that there is no reason for Ofgem to say that energy broker fees must be transparent for micro-businesses and the same not be true for larger SMEs and bigger organisations.

While legislation for greater transparency has already been introduced for very small businesses, who are known as micro-businesses, under Supplier Licence Conditions, Box Power CIC and the other signatories say the regulator has ‘abandoned’ other firms and organisations.

The letter states: “We do not agree that larger businesses are able to look after their own interests, that just because this is a long-standing arrangement that it should continue or that Ofgem are best placed looking at issues affecting microbusinesses only.”

Letter organiser Box Power channels all its profits back into good causes, giving £800,000 to local and regional charities in 2021. Chief Executive Corin Dalby says it will bypass Ofgem and seek help from the government if the regulator fails to act.

Dalby said: “For there to be trust, there must be transparency. They shouldn’t have to argue for support from the organisation created to protect all consumers. Rogue brokers are adding excessive commissions and all the while it is the end user who is paying for it.

“Transparency should be a given, so whatever the level of commission the business is fully aware and in agreement.

“Not only that but now businesses are incurring even higher energy prices, some brokers are adding even higher fees because they think they can get away with it. This is an extra burden on businesses at exactly the point they can least afford it. We refuse to stand by and allow this to continue and will do all we can to ensure this is brought to a stop.”

But if the regulator simply added greater transparency to the legislation monitoring energy and brokers, this could significantly reduce the bill for business. The signatories want fee disclosure for all firms, by bringing pre-contract broker cost transparency paid by the businesses within their energy supply contracts to all business sectors and not just the micro-business sector as at present.

Andrew Goodacre, the CEO of the British Independent Retailers Association, said: “It is vital for all businesses to have transparency with their energy bills and any other costs associated with the supply of energy. The recent significant increases in the cost of energy have made this even more important.”

Muntazir Dipoti, the NFRN’s National President, added: “Independent convenience retailers are the fabric of society and play a critical role in their communities, but with the cost of doing business soaring, many Fed members are struggling to stay in business.

“It is, therefore, critical that Ofgem takes action against these hidden charges to prevent even more retailers being left severely out of pocket.”

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