All 1 Debates between Guy Opperman and Robert Smith

Wed 19th Jan 2011

Fuel Poverty

Debate between Guy Opperman and Robert Smith
Wednesday 19th January 2011

(13 years, 3 months ago)

Westminster Hall
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Guy Opperman Portrait Guy Opperman (Hexham) (Con)
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I am grateful for the opportunity to speak in this debate, which is timely and well-intentioned.

Given the harsh weather conditions leading up to Christmas last year, fuel poverty has never been of such concern to the people of Hexham. I represent well over 1,000 square miles of rural Northumberland, and the subject is most important to my constituents. It is no exaggeration to say that many people have to make a straight choice between heating and eating. They are in a difficult situation. If that does not sound primitive enough, NFU Mutual, the rural insurer in my part of the world, found in its annual rural crime survey last year that domestic fuel was sixth on the list of the top 10 items most commonly stolen from homes. The “Crimewatch” scene in Northumberland is astonishing for the number of people who are suffering rural crime with the loss of their fuel.

Although there are ongoing recommendations on how to discourage thieves, this crime wave is something that the country cannot tolerate. Is it something that we can deal with or, in reality, do we need assistance in the March Budget? I certainly hope that we shall get such assistance; I believe that it would be right, because the problem is putting an unacceptable strain on people’s incomes.

I have extensively gone through the approximately 20-plus providers of heating oil in rural Northumberland. In excess of a dozen of them are owned by one company. Hon. Members will be amazed to hear that they are all using their old names, and that they are all operating and selling as if they were perfectly independent. Some people have been buying from these companies for 30 or more years. It is only when one starts digging that one realises that there is a significant problem, which affects well over half the population. It is well known that the company behind this is DCC Energy, a Dublin-based provider. The company’s fuel oil customers are less able to negotiate a good price, as the cost of oil continues to rocket.

Robert Smith Portrait Sir Robert Smith
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A more serious problem in the working of the market is that, at times of stress, quite a few of these supply companies say when asked for a price, “We can’t give you a price now; it’ll be the price on the day that we make the delivery.” How can the market work efficiently if people cannot shop around when placing an order? Would the hon. Gentleman like to comment on that aspect?

Guy Opperman Portrait Guy Opperman
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I would: the simple truth is that customers, wherever they are and whatever problems they face, need to shop around. If they do not, they will face the problem that the hon. Gentleman describes, which I and others in Hexham have come across. They will be deprived of the ability to buy fuel on an ongoing basis.