Fresh on the back of the government's lunatic scheme to add twenty or thirty per cent to household fuel bills as part of a vain attempt to turn the economic clock back two centuries (see previous post), comes this from the BBC:
Rising unemployment and higher energy prices are likely to push hundreds of thousands more homes into fuel poverty, a key government advisory body says. The Fuel Poverty Advisory Group (FPAG) says about 4m households in England are already in fuel poverty, spending more than 10% of their income on energy. And it has urged ministers to set out a detailed plan for meeting their own target of ending the problem by 2016. The government says it has spent £20bn on cutting fuel poverty since 2000...
NB, £20 billion divided by nine years divided by 4 million households = £555 per household per annum, which is bugger all compared to the £16,000 it intends to take from each and every one of us and channel into the hands of whichever "green technology" companies have been lobbying hardest in Brussels and Whitehall.
Stormlight
4 hours ago
2 comments:
For technologies which have not been proved in the least.
They tell us that there are 4 'drivers' of fuel poverty
High Energy costs
Low Incomes
Poor Energy Efficiency in the home
Something else, can't remember
No mention of wasting household income on crap spending/lifestyle so no cash left for the electric.
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