SSE & Scottish Power fined for efficiency breaches

SSE AND SCOTTISH POWER are to pay penalties totalling £4.15 million to charity following their failure to deliver energy efficiency measures on time.
The suppliers failed to implement moves to help reduce bills for households in low-income areas by December 2012. Picture: John DevlinThe suppliers failed to implement moves to help reduce bills for households in low-income areas by December 2012. Picture: John Devlin
The suppliers failed to implement moves to help reduce bills for households in low-income areas by December 2012. Picture: John Devlin

The suppliers were required to implement moves to help reduce bills for households in low-income areas by December 2012 but Scottish Power only delivered 70% of its obligation and SSE achieved 90.9%.

CONNECT WITH THE SCOTSMAN

Subscribe to our daily newsletter (requires registration) and get the latest news, sport and business headlines delivered to your inbox every morning

• You can also follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Google +

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Ofgem said it has secured a redress package of £2.4 million from Scottish Power and £1.75 million from SSE, with the payments going towards charities and funds that will benefit vulnerable consumers.

The penalties mean the regulator has secured £55 million from six companies due to their failure to meet the Government’s Community Energy Savings Programme (CESP) and the Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT).

Last week, Ofgem ordered British Gas to pay £11 million while it issued power station firm Drax with a record penalty of £28 million. Fellow generation firms InterGen and GDF Suez/IPM are to pay £11 million and £450,000 respectively.

Ofgem said Scottish Power’s failure to meet its CESP target meant that several thousand households missed out on energy efficiency measures during the cold winter of 2012/13. The company made up the 30% shortfall by April 2013.

Management were aware that the company could fail to meet its target at the end of 2011 but Ofgem said budget increases for CESP schemes were made too slowly.

Ofgem’s senior partner, Sarah Harrison, said: “Scottish Power clearly missed its target by the required deadline, disadvantaging many households.

“Today’s redress package sends a clear message to the energy industry that late delivery of obligations is unacceptable.”

SSE’s failure to meet its target on time meant the equivalent of 2,100 households missed out on energy efficiency measures.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It made up the shortfall by May 2013 and ensured that around 346 more homes received energy efficiency measures than required.

The £1.75 million penalty will benefit vulnerable consumers through the Foundations Independent Living Trust, Energy Action Scotland and the Citizen’s Advice Bureau for use in Wales.

SEE ALSO:

SCOTSMAN TABLET AND IPHONE APPS

• Download your free 30-day trial for our iPad, Android and Kindle apps