Heat networks roll-out being reviewed as Mancs left with rocketing bills

[ad_1]

The planned roll-out of private heat networks – which can leave people with sky-high energy bills, trapped with a supplier they didn’t necessarily choose – is being reviewed.

It follows concerns highlighted by the Manchester Evening News. Last month, the M.E.N. reported on problems at The Chips building on Lampwick Lane in Ancoats, where residents live on a private heat network, meaning they cannot change energy supplier.




People living there were up-in-arms over sky-rocketing energy bills, with one saying his monthly tariff had gone up from around £60 per month to £425 for July. Private heat networks use insulated pipes to move heat from energy source to multiple homes or businesses all located in the same area, with ‘communal’ networks only covering one building, and ‘district’ networks covering multiple premises in close proximity.

In The Chips’ case, as a resident uses more energy, their bill will go up, but people said their standing charges pushing prices up – rising by 1025 per cent, from 7p to 80p per day in some cases.

READ MORE: Get the latest on Manchester city centre here.

READ MORE: A small piece of Mancunian history could return to its Northern Quarter home

“My energy bill went from £83 to £280 for a month,” said Lee Halsall, who moved in in 2019. “There’s no explanation to go with it. The place is now a living nightmare.”

[ad_2]

Source link