Support our Nation today - please donate here
News

‘It’s going to be tough’ admits outgoing Prime Minister as energy crisis hits businesses and households

30 Aug 2022 4 minute read
Prime Minister Boris Johnson looks at a hole in the ground during a visit with Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries to Henbury Farm in north Dorset. Picture by Ben Birchall / PA Wire

People faced with an 80% increase in the energy price cap face tough times ahead but should have a sense of “hope and perspective”, Boris Johnson said.

The outgoing Prime Minister said a “huge amount” of help for households had already been promised and his successor – either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak – would provide further support.

Regulator Ofgem has announced a rise in price cap for around 24 million households in Wales, England and Scotland, sending the average yearly bill from £1,971 to £3,549.

Wales’ First Minister has already criticised the UK Government’s “failure to address this crisis”, calling for an emergency budget to raise windfall taxes on energy companies’ profits and freeze prices.

But Boris Johnson highlighted the announcements already made which will see £1,200 going to the eight million most vulnerable households.

But he added: “Whichever of the two candidates gets in next week, what the Government is also going to do is provide a further package of support for helping people with the cost of energy.

“What we’ve got to do is get through the tough months – and I’m not going to shrink from this, it is going to be tough in the months to come, it’s going to be tough through to next year.”

‘Nuclear’

The price increase in gas is being driven by Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, he said during a visit to Dorset.

“We’re going to get through it,” Mr Johnson said. “We’re taking 26% more of our own gas from the North Sea than we did last year, we’re much less dependent on Putin’s supplies.”

He added “I just want to give people a sense of hope and perspective” because the UK was in a “strong economic position” which meant the Government had been able to provide support and it also had a “long-term British energy security strategy”.

The Prime Minister hinted at further announcements on nuclear power this week. He is understood to have given the go-ahead for financing for the construction of the Sizewell C nuclear reactor in Suffolk, although negotiations continue on the project.

Mr Johnson said: “We’re putting in more nuclear and you’ll be hearing more about that later this week. And we’re putting in absolutely shedloads of wind power as well.”

‘Universality’

As the next prime minister will not take office until September 6, decisions on any further aid packages to help households struggling with soaring bills have been left to Mr Johnson’s successor.

Frontrunner Ms Truss’s camp said she will not finalise her plans for cost-of-living help before receiving the “full support and advice” only available to the government of the day.

Culture minister Matt Warman, a supporter of Mr Sunak, said blanket measures could be needed, with increased help targeted at those worst hit by the rise in energy bills.

He pointed to comments from Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi that suggested “this is something that is going to affect people somewhat higher up the income scale as well”.

He told Sky News that the principles of the earlier support package should remain in place to “focus the help on those who need it most but also to acknowledge that a degree of universality is the right one”.

‘Distress’

Labour Party chairwoman Anneliese Dodds said the “massive increase” in the cap on energy bills “will plunge many, many households into financial distress” as she accused the Government of “fantasy economics” over the cost of living.

Asked about reports Ms Truss would support oil and gas drilling licences in the North Sea and if that is the answer, Ms Dodds told Times Radio: “No, it’s not, and the answer really is to be taking action to get the cost of those bills down.”

She added: “We are only ever going to be setting out plans that we have fully costed and I’m afraid right now from the Conservatives we’re just getting fantasy economics.

“They’re not saying how they would deliver anything. They keep changing their plans every five minutes. That’s not the case with Labour.”


Support our Nation today

For the price of a cup of coffee a month you can help us create an independent, not-for-profit, national news service for the people of Wales, by the people of Wales.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
8 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
I.Humphrys
I.Humphrys
1 year ago

He’s a genius!

One of the two witnesses
One of the two witnesses
1 year ago

Yes. It’s going to be tough. Because of HIM. But he doesn’t care, he’s stolen all the lightbulbs, carpets and probably wallpaper from Drowning Street and is f*****g off into the sunset having raped the public purse for all he could get.
But let’s be honest Alibaba Boorish “Let the bodies pile high” dePiffle Hogson really didn’t care when he was IN orifice either

The Original Mark
The Original Mark
1 year ago

I think it’s deep enough to bury all the evidence, what do you think Nadine?

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
1 year ago

Culture Minister recommends blanket measures…aimed at Zahawi’s horses I suppose…

G Horton-Jones
G Horton-Jones
1 year ago

After yet another Tory farce decent citizens have lost all hope in a fog of false promises.

Yes it will be tough for the common man but not for Boris, Liz , and Rishi and their Westminster poodles

Peter Cuthbert
Peter Cuthbert
1 year ago

Could I, as a died in the wool pedant, insist that Mr Johnson should be labelled at the “Disgraced Former Prime Minister”. After all he was forced out for being an immoral, lying, layabout. So we are to get more nuclear with hugely long build times and even longer waste disposal times, funded by the Chinese, more fracking with long lead times and more off-shore wind power also with slow lead times. Why is he not removing the ban on building on-shore wind that is much cheaper and much quicker to build? I suppose the answer comes back to who… Read more »

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
1 year ago

If that is not a caption competition…A funk hole for Ms Truss, a gift from Nad and Alex, cheaper to run than a fridge…

Last edited 1 year ago by Mab Meirion
Gareth
Gareth
1 year ago

Just like all the other lies he has told, he had the ditch dug, then failed to throw himself in it. Annoyingly predictable.

Our Supporters

All information provided to Nation.Cymru will be handled sensitively and within the boundaries of the Data Protection Act 2018.