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UW July HR Single pages

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14 | JULY 2022 | UTILITY WEEK Energy From rebates to real reform: the case for an Energy Reset As part of our Energy Reset campaign, leading energy retailers have contributed to a major report compiled by Utility Week and PA Consulting. Editor James Wallin gives an overview of the report along with an excerpt from a chapter on future competition. A s set out on the preceding pages, the Treasury's £15 billion support pack- age to protect customers from winter price hikes, which took place just a• er our last magazine went to press, was widely praised by the sector. However, it also highlighted that short- term solutions are not sustainable in the face of complex underlying problems a ecting the volatility of prices and the way they are passed on to consumers. The issue is at the heart of Utility Week's Energy Reset campaign, which aims to use the current spotlight on energy prices to highlight the need for wider market reform. This is an unavoidable step in reducing energy usage, bringing down bills and decar- bonising the country. Now leading energy retailers have shared their views with Utility Week for a major new report, Creating Sustainable Businesses and Prices, produced in association with PA Consulting. The report looks at how the potential of retailers to drive forward the energy transi- tion can be unleashed, by creating the condi- tions for sustainable businesses that deliver sustainable prices. However, change cannot come about through reform of the energy retail market in isolation. The work to ensure a retail market … t for the future will be a core part of tackling the much discussed – and suddenly very top- ical – energy trilemma of balancing net zero, security of supply, and a ordability. This requires much wider reform to ensure the wholesale market reˆ ects the falling price of renewables and that decarbonisation meas- ures support a rapid rollout of green power as well as incentivising demand-side response. These issues, and the frictions aris- ing from them, are discussed in the report through interviews with suppliers, Ofgem, politicians, trade and consumer bodies and independent experts.

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