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Retail & Consumer

Energy crisis: Pure Planet and Colorado Energy collapse

Regulator Ofgem has said it will appoint customers with new suppliers and has urged people not to switch

Ofgem is the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's electricity and gas regulator(Image: PA)

Two more º£½ÇÊÓÆµ energy suppliers have collapsed due to rocketing global wholesale energy prices.

Pure Planet and Colorado Energy, which have a combined 250,000 º£½ÇÊÓÆµ customers, have become the latest failures after nine small energy supplies went bust from the start of September.

Energy watchdog Ofgem has said it will protect the customers’ supply of energy and credit in accounts.

Bath-based Pure Planet, which has 235,000 º£½ÇÊÓÆµ customers, said it was unable to continue operating due to the "global energy crisis, record-high wholesale energy costs, and the restrictions placed on us by Ofgem’s Price Cap”.

Co-founders of the BP-backed supplier, Andrew Ralston, Chris Alliott and Steven Day said: “We are heartbroken that Pure Planet has entered the Supplier of Last Resort (SoLR) process due to the global energy crisis and the way it has impacted the GB supply market.

“The Government’s price cap, while protecting consumers from sky-rocketing global wholesale energy prices, is not matched by anything which protects suppliers.

“Instead suppliers are being asked to fund the difference between the record costs of wholesale energy and what they are allowed to sell it for to consumers. Suppliers are increasingly unable to cover their costs.

“Too many have gone bust already, and more will in the future unless something changes.”