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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Ovo boss unveils plan to deal with energy bills crisis

Stephen Fitzpatrick has put forward a 10-point action plan that would see the government subsidise bills

Ovo is headquartered in Bristol(Image: Ovo)

The boss of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ energy company Ovo has set out a plan for the government to subsidise gas and electricity bills amid the cost-of-living crisis.

Stephen Fitzpatrick, the founder of the Bristol-headquartered energy firm, has put forward a 10-point action plan that he says will see the poorest families get the most support.

Under the plan, every household would get some help towards bills, but low-income families would be prioritised in a similar way to how the tax-free allowance works. Meanwhile, support would taper off for high earners using more electricity.

Mr Fitzpatrick is also urging the government to bring forward support measures, saying the £400 help towards bills – and up to another £650 for those on qualifying benefits – should be made in full before Christmas.

He told the BBC that helping low-income families with energy bills “has to be the first order of business” for the next prime minister.

“If we don’t use every available moment over the next 12 weeks to solve this, we are going to see a winter like never before, with people going hungry and going cold and the NHS being overwhelmed by the health impacts of the energy crisis,” he said.

It comes after industry regulator Ofgem last week confirmed that energy bills for the 24 million British households on the price cap will rise by 80% in October from £1,971 to £3,549. Further eye-watering increases in the cap are due in January and April.

The action proposed by Ovo – the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s third largest energy firm – also calls for the higher charges faced by pre-payment customers to be scrapped as it branded them a “poverty penalty”.