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Octopus Energy boss says blackouts unlikely this winter as he urges No 10 to help out families

Greg Jackson: ‘The last support package was really significant. It’s just that the crisis has deepened since then’

Greg Jackson, founder and chief executive of Octopus Energy

The boss of one of Britain’s biggest home energy providers thinks the chances of winter blackouts were unlikely – despite fears over gas supplies caused by war in Ukraine.

Greg Jackson said the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ had strong infrastructure in place to deal with drops in fossil fuel, partly thanks to investment in renewable energy.

Octopus in particular – which has major bases in Leicester and Greater Manchester – uses technology such as solar and wind to offset carbon emissions and says 100 per cent of its electricity is green.

The group’s generation business recently teamed up with the Nest pension scheme to take a £200 million stake in the Hornsea One Wind Farm, off the Yorkshire coast, which is one of the world’s biggest operational offshore wind farms.

It follows investments in the Lincs Offshore Wind Farm on behalf of Octopus Renewables Infrastructure Trust, the Borssele V Offshore Wind Farm in the Netherlands, and in floating offshore wind developer Simply Blue.

Last year Nest appointed Octopus to help it invest billions in green energy on behalf of Nest’s 11 million pension savers.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Mr Jackson said: “I think the reality is that domestic supply is safe and that industry, from time to time, sometimes driven by prices, by the way, voluntarily reduce their energy usage.

“So, we have a terrible price crisis, but I think the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is more fortunate than many of our European neighbours that we’ve got more resilient supply.