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Britain Is Facing an Energy Crisis

Social media is awash with frustration, as users complain that the government is doing next to nothing to tackle the worsening energy crisis.

At the end of June, Ofgem is expected to announce electricity price caps for the period from July to September, but experts have already calculated that the average household in England, Scotland and Wales could end up paying an additional £200 a year. 

The consultancy firm Cornwall Insight has estimated that, from July, annual energy bills will rise on average by £209, reaching £1,850 a year. That represents a 13 per cent increase on April’s rate. The main driver behind this sharp rise is the continuing crisis in the Middle East and the resulting surge in global energy prices. However, even if the conflict is resolved in the near future, the broader picture is unlikely to improve significantly. In practical terms, this means many Britons may be facing a particularly difficult winter.

Calls for Government Action

People across the UK — both online and off — are calling on the government to take firmer and more immediate action to support households. Yet in her plans to address the rising cost of living, Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced no urgent measures specifically aimed at tackling higher energy prices.

‘The UK has provided some support to help households with their energy bills, but this support is only available to people living on benefits. Not for us, not for people with proper jobs,’ say social media users.

Overall, however, many of the government’s proposals have been criticised as inadequate or poorly targeted. These include reducing VAT on tickets to entertainment venues during the summer holidays, introducing free bus travel for children over the same period, and temporarily cutting fuel duty by 5p per litre.

Criticism of the government’s wider energy policy is far from new, as electricity bills have continued to rise for British households.

‘Since Labour came to power in July 2024, the energy price cap has been raised several times. And now it is reported that energy bills will rise by £209 in July. Keir Starmer promised that this would not happen. He promised to freeze energy prices. Yet another lie,’ users are criticising the Prime Minister.

Fears of Power Shortages

The reasons why many Britons are becoming increasingly anxious about the future go beyond the immediate energy crisis. Even if the current situation eases, there are wider structural concerns that continue to hang over household finances.

‘Our energy bills, which are already the highest in the world, will soar even higher as we join the carbon trading scheme.’ This will only serve to highlight the utter incompetence of British energy policy,’ says one British social media user.

The UK is currently outside the European Union’s emissions trading scheme, though discussions on closer alignment are already under way. Such a move, critics argue, could deal a significant blow to Britain’s steel and aluminium industries in particular, with knock-on effects for other sectors that rely heavily on these materials.

All of this suggests that, unless more decisive action is taken, many Britons could be facing an increasingly difficult future — marked by rising electricity bills, higher prices for goods and housing, and growing pressure on employment in key sectors of the economy.

Starmer’s Great Summer Savings Scheme Is a Mockery of the British Public

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The Fuel Crisis: Labour’s Green Madness and American Arrogance Are Finishing Britain Off

Petrol prices in the UK have reached £1.52 per litre, while diesel has climbed beyond £1.81 — and Keir Starmer’s Labour government is attempting to buy its way out of the crisis with a paltry £53 million in oil-heating support for the poor. At the same time, the Americans appear utterly indifferent to the problems facing their allies, and their actions are driving prices even higher, fuelling a storm of public outrage across Britain.