EDF set to buy British Energy

Posted by admin on 23 September, 2008 under Business news | Be the First to Comment

French energy firm EDF is expected to announce a £12.4bn deal to buy British Energy, the firm which operates the UK’s eight nuclear power plants.

In addition, Centrica, which owns British Gas, will take 25% of all power generated by British Energy once it is in French hands, the BBC has learnt.

It will also take a 25% stake in all new nuclear plants built by EDF.

The deal with EDF is seen by Centrica as vital to reducing its dependence on imported gas.

The cost to Centrica of this investment will be around £3bn.

EDF’s acquisition of British Energy is due to be announced on Wednesday.

The deal will be controversial, BBC business editor Robert Peston says, because it will be seen by some as handing the UK’s nuclear future to a company owned by the French state.

Centrica’s investment may placate some critics.

The involvement of Centrica also helped to persuade British Energy’s recalcitrant shareholders to back the sale to EDF, since they are also holders of Centrica shares, our correspondent adds.

Second time around

British Energy owns the UK’s eight nuclear power stations and generates an estimated 14% of its electricity supply.

BRITISH ENERGY’S NUCLEAR PLANTS
Torness
Hartlepool
Sizewell B
Dungeness B
Hinkley Point B
Heysham 1
Heysham 2
Hunterston B

EDF is expected to build four new nuclear plants on existing British Energy sites and sell-on the remaining ones.

The UK government, which owns 35% of British Energy, is keen to ensure more than one company is involved in building the next generation of nuclear plants.

EDF was set to buy British Energy in July, but the deal was called off on the eve of the announcement when shareholders protested that it was being sold too cheaply.

Talks continued and EDF returned with an improved offer which has been accepted.

EDF is understood to have offered 774 pence a share for British Energy, nine pence more than its initial offer.

News reported by The BBC

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More firms increase energy bills

Posted by admin on 29 August, 2008 under Business news | Be the First to Comment

Two more energy firms have said they will increase gas and electricity prices, blaming higher wholesale costs.

Scottish Power said it would raise gas prices by an average of 34% and electricity prices by 9%, effective from Monday 1 September.

Soon after, Npower said domestic customers would see an average rise of 14% for electricity and 26% for gas, effective immediately.

E.On, British Gas, EdF and Scottish and Southern Energy have all raised prices.

PRICE INCREASES THIS YEAR
4 Jan – Npower
Gas up 17.2%, electricity up 12.7%
15 Jan – EDF Energy
Gas up 12.9%, electricity up 7.9%
18 Jan – British Gas
Gas and electricity up 15%
1 Feb – Scottish Power
Gas up by 15%, electricity up 14%
7 Feb – E.On
Gas up 15%, electricity up 9.7%
19 March – Scottish & Southern
Gas up 15.8%, electricity up 14.2%
5 July – EDF Energy
Gas up 22%, electricity up 17%
30 July – British Gas
Gas up 35%, electricity up 9%
21 Aug – Eon
Gas up 26%, electricity up 16%
21 Aug – Scottish & Southern
Gas up 29.2%, electricity up 19.2%
29 Aug – Scottish Power
Gas up 34%, electricity up 9%
29 Aug – Npower
Gas up 26%, electricity up 14%

Scottish Power said it was “forced to follow other energy providers”.

“These are difficult times and we understand the financial impact this announcement will have on our customers,” said Willie MacDiarmid, Scottish Power’s director of energy retail.

He added that the volatility in the gas market was contributing to higher UK domestic prices.

Dual fuel customers will see their bills increase by an average of 25%.

Scottish Power also said it planned to spend £40m on steps to help protect vulnerable customers over the next three years.

The firm, owned by Spain’s Iberdrola, is to invest £2.8bn from 2008 to 2010.

Squeezed’

Npower said: “Today’s price rises are due to massive increases in wholesale costs which make current pricing levels unsustainable, following a price decrease in 2007 and an increase at the start of 2008.”

“Until today Npower’s domestic gas prices were still the same level they were 18 months ago – whereas, during this time, the cost of wholesale gas has doubled,” said the firm.

“Many pensioners, already worrying about whether they can afford to heat their homes this winter, will be outraged by news of yet more colossal price hikes” Gordon Lishman, Age Concern

The company also said electricity generation was directly affected by “soaring raw material prices, which have risen by 122% for gas and coal, and 79% for oil, over the last 12 months”.

The firm said it took the decision very reluctantly, “especially as household budgets are being squeezed so much at the moment”.

This marks the second wave of price rises for both providers since the start of the year.

Scottish Power had increased prices on 1 February while Npower had raised prices on 4 January.

‘Consumers struggling’

Following the latest rises, Energywatch urged the government to adapt an action plan to provide “real support to consumers struggling to pay energy bills that have gone up by almost 40% this year alone”.

Average prices have risen 38% in 2008, eclipsing 2006 when average prices rose by 32%, said the watchdog.

Ofgem is set to release an investigation into energy markets in the weeks ahead

“There is strong expectation that the government will shortly announce a raft of measures to protect the most vulnerable,” said Energywatch director of campaigns, Adam Scorer.

Gordon Lishman, Director General of Age Concern, said: “Many pensioners, already worrying about whether they can afford to heat their homes this winter, will be outraged by news of yet more colossal price hikes.”

News reported by The BBC

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BE backer ‘proposes Centrica tie’

Posted by admin on 26 August, 2008 under Business news | Be the First to Comment

British Energy’s biggest investor, Invesco, has called for the nuclear power generator to merge with British Gas owner Centrica, it is reported.

Neil Woodford, investment head at Invesco, which has a 15% stake in British Energy, said merger was the way forward for the two energy firms.

“Together they can work out a joint venture with EDF to build nuclear sites,” he told the Sunday Telegraph.

British Energy would not comment on the report.

In early August Centrica, the owner of British Gas, said it may consider a merger with BE.

Centrica also said then that it was talking to an unnamed third party about taking a minority stake in British Energy if that firm bought the nuclear operator.

French power group EDF had been poised to buy British Energy for £12bn ($22.4bn) but the deal stalled at the last minute because of disagreement over the price.

As well as its stake in British Energy which is worth about £1.5bn, Invesco also owns 5% of Centrica,

A takeover of British Energy, which is 35%-owned by the government, has been viewed as the best way of supporting the UK’s plans to build a new generation of nuclear plants over the next 20 years.

News reported by The BBC

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Fuel price rises differ across UK

Posted by admin on 10 August, 2008 under Business news | Be the First to Comment

Customers of the major energy companies have different dual fuel bills depending on where they live in the UK.

EDF Energy and British Gas raised prices in recent days but some areas have seen bigger increases than others.

EDF customers in South Wales pay £94.47 more a year than those in the North West for the same energy usage, and British Gas also shows differences.

The companies say that transportation costs, accounting for about 14% of the average bill, differ across the UK.

For British Gas customers, the biggest difference is £31.23 a year when comparing direct debit paying customers in the Southern and South East areas.

The differences were highlighted when the two companies raised their prices within a week.

Highs and lows

On 25 July, EDF was the first of the big six energy companies to raise prices this summer when it raised gas prices by an average of 22% and electricity prices by 17% for domestic customers.

“Our aim is to be as competitive as possible in each region” British Gas spokesman

Figures obtained by the BBC show that, following the changes, South Wales remained the area with the most expensive dual fuel EDF Energy bills. The South West and South Scotland was the next most pricey.

The cheapest areas are the North West, the Eastern region and Yorkshire.

On 30 July, British Gas announced it was raising gas prices by a record 35% and electricity prices by 9%.

The UK’s biggest domestic energy supplier, which has 15.9 million customers, blamed “soaring wholesale energy prices”.

For British Gas dual fuel customers, the Southern and Eastern areas are the most expensive. Those in the Southern area have seen a 30.8% price hike in the latest round of increases.

The former Seeboard area of the South East and Yorkshire are the cheapest.

Transport costs

A British Gas spokesman said that the maximum regional variation was plus or minus 2.7%.

The other four energy companies are expected to raise prices

There were also regional differences in the price changes for customers who pay for gas and electricity separately, he said.

Electricity supply had always been regionally priced in the UK, based on the 14 old supply regions.

The British Gas spokesman said that regional gas pricing reflected the different transport and distribution charges applied by regulated local mains operators.

Basically, the closer customers are to a distribution point, the lower the cost, he said.

He added that British Gas previously averaged out these costs when it passed them on to customers, but now transport and distribution costs made up 14% of a gas bill, the company has decided to charge differently in each region.

“Our aim is to be as competitive as possible in each region,” he said.

The other companies in the “big six” group of suppliers are expected to raise prices in the coming weeks.

News reported by The BBC

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British Gas announces huge price rise for households

Posted by admin on 31 July, 2008 under Business news | Be the First to Comment

Some 16 million customers of British Gas face huge increases in their bills after the country’s biggest home energy provider announced price rises of up to 35 per cent yesterday.

From today, British Gas is raising the price of its gas by 35 per cent, while customers buying electricity from it will pay 9.4 per cent more. Households who buy both services from the utility will see their dual fuel bills rise by 25 per cent.

The increases mean the average household’s dual fuel bill will rise from £1,055 a year to £1,322.

Energy analysts pointed out that before the 15 per cent increase in costs implemented by British Gas in January, the typical household was paying £912 a year. Yesterday’s price rise means British Gas’s bills have now risen by 45 per cent so far this year.

However, the energy group said it had no option but to raise its prices following an increase in the cost of gas on the wholesale markets of almost 90 per cent since last winter.

“We very much regret that we have had to make this decision at a time when many household budgets are already under pressure,” said Phil Bentley, the company’s managing director. “The simple fact is, though, that we have entered an era of unprecedented high world energy prices.”

Centrica, British Gas’s parent company, owns substantial gas reserves, but only supplies a quarter of its retail arm’s needs and is, in any case, prevented by regulators from subsidising the unit’s prices. The company is due to unveil its interim results in full today, but revealed last night that profits at British Gas fell to £166m during the first six months of the year, 69 per cent down on last year’s figure.

Mr Bentley said that without today’s price increases, British Gas would lose several hundred million pounds in the second half of the year.

The company is desperate to refute accusations that it is profiteering, particularly in the face of growing calls for a windfall tax on the energy industry, and yesterday reiterated its promise to spend £43m over the next 12 months on “fuel poor” customers struggling to pay their bills.

British Gas also promised it would make no further increases this year to the bills of customers on its standard tariffs.

But analysts said the company might have to make further price increases early in 2009 and warned that its main rivals were certain to announce similar price increases for their own customers.

Aside from British Gas, of the next five biggest home energy suppliers in the UK, only EDF has so far raised its prices this summer, announcing increases of up to 22 per cent last week. Scottish & Southern has already warned that higher bills are imminent, while ScottishPower, E.On and npower are expected to fall into line within weeks.

“The difference between the main suppliers on price has been and will remain very small,” said Joe Malinowski, the chief executive of The Energy Shop. “There is no question that the other providers will follow these moves.”

Mr Malinowski expects most providers, including British Gas, to raise their prices again in January or February of next year unless there is a substantial fall in the cost of wholesale gas in the meantime.

The soaring cost of fuel bills has prompted calls for the Government to review regulation of the energy industry, the structure of which was heavily criticised by MPs sitting on the Business and Enterprise Select Committee this week. Ministers are also under pressure to do more to help low-income households caught out by the price rises.

However, energy companies insist that Britons pay lower home energy bills than consumers in most other countries in Europe. The most recent figures from the Department of Business and Enterprise show that, at the end of 2007, UK domestic gas prices were the fourth lowest in the European Union and electricity prices were the eighth lowest. While prices have risen since the end of last year, there have also been increases on the Continent.

Nevertheless, Brendan Barber, the general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, called for a rethink of the Government’s energy policy. “The UK’s coal reserves must be allowed to play a bigger part in our energy mix,” he said. “Coal would give UK consumers and industry more stable and secure energy prices, rather than the volatility we are now witnessing.”

Gordon Lishman, the director-general of Age Concern, said: “It is absolutely unacceptable that around 2.25 million pensioner households are now living in fuel poverty, and thousands more will soon be facing the same fate. As an emergency measure to help alleviate the problem this winter, the Government and energy companies should be working together to offer ‘fuel vouchers’ to the poorest pensioners.”

Economists warned that the latest round of price rises would also be a further blow to the Bank of England’s attempts to bring inflation back to its 2 per cent target rate. Philip Shaw, an economist at Investec, said energy suppliers were increasing bills by more than expected, making it likely that inflation would rise even more significantly above the current level of 3.8 per cent.

“[This] increases the chances that inflation will hit 5 per cent over the autumn,” Mr Shaw warned. Such a rise would prompt calls for a rise in interest rates, putting additional pressure on many households’ budgets.

News reported by The Independent

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Centrica hit by high energy costs

Posted by admin on under Business news | Be the First to Comment

British Gas owner Centrica has seen operating profits decline 20% in the first six months of the year, following increases in wholesale gas prices.

Profits fell to £992m from £1.23bn a year earlier.

Despite the drop in earnings, Centrica said it would raise its dividend to 3.9 pence a share from 3.35p.

A day earlier Centrica said British Gas would increase gas bills by 35% with immediate effect in a bid to restore “reasonable profitability”.

Centrica chief executive says prices had to rise to support a sustainable business
Centrica said the results were “good” given the tough market conditions.

The company’s shares added 1.7% in London following the earnings news.
Centrica said it was obliged to raise gas prices in light of dwindling reserves and higher oil prices that had pushed up costs.

Centrica’s move to increase prices on Wednesday came after EDF Energy raised prices last week. Analysts say other firms are likely to follow suit.

Phil Bentley, managing director of British Gas told the BBC: “The price of gas for this winter, even though it’s fallen a little bit, it’s still double what was last year”.

News reported by The BBC

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British Energy close to sale deal

Posted by admin on 24 July, 2008 under Business news | Be the First to Comment

French energy firm EDF and British Gas owner Centrica are set to announce that they have bought UK nuclear firm British Energy, the BBC has learned.

The BBC’s business editor Robert Peston said EDF and Centrica will probably announce early next week they are paying more than £12bn for the company.

British Energy, which owns eight UK nuclear power stations, has been on the auction block for months.

The deal could raise as much as £4bn for the Chancellor.

British Energy has been part-owned by the UK government which now wants to sell its stake. The firm was privatised in 1996 but ended up being bailed out in 2002 by the government after running into severe financial difficulties.

One source told the BBC that “there’s a push to conclude a deal before the holiday. We hope it will be done in the next few days.”

“What will happen to the £4bn plus that would be received by the Department for Business when its stake is sold?” Robert Peston BBC business editor

British Energy’s board is insisting that EDF pay more than 750p a share, perhaps as much as 775p – which would value the company at well over £12bn – having rejected an offer of 680p made by EDF in May.

The deal is not yet finalised and could still be delayed.

But as and when the deal is done, up to a quarter of British Energy is likely to remain British.

Ownership

Centrica, owner of British Gas, is negotiating with EDF to be its minority partner in the acquisition and may end up paying around £3bn for a 25% stake in British Energy.

However the deal is likely to be controversial on several fronts, including whether EDF should be able to develop new power plants on existing British Energy sites.

There is also the issue of whether the UK’s energy needs should be placed in the hands of a firm run by a French company.

Another key concern is what will happen to the money that the Department for Business is tipped to make when it sells its share in the nuclear firm, and how that money will be invested.

News reported by The BBC

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