UK minister says ‘no immediate concern’ on gas supplies

There’s “no immediate concern” about fuel supplies running short for consumers in the UK, Conservative MP Alok Sharma said on the 19th September.

 

Mr Sharma, president of the COP26 climate initiative, also told Sky News that government officials “don’t see any risks going into winter” from rising gas prices about to hit British households.

 

“People should be confident that the supplies will be there, and that we will be protecting them in terms of price rises,” Mr Sharma said on “Trevor Philipps on Sunday.” “But of course we’re not complacent about this.”

 

Top UK officials are in emergency talks continued into the 20th September, led by Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng.

 

Mr Kwarteng met with senior executives from energy companies and regulators on the 18th September to discuss the jump in gas prices which has threatened to shut suppliers and disrupt industries from fertiliser to meat.

 

He was due to meet with the UK energy regular Ofgem and hold further talks with executives to plan a way forward.

 

Europe’s energy crisis has helped push natural gas prices to records in the UK The squeeze in supplies and the jump in prices has forced at least five UK providers to shut.

 

The executives assured Mr Kwarteng there was no threat to supplies as the country moves into the colder winter months.

 

“Ofgem has robust measures in place to ensure that customers do not need to worry, their needs are met, and their gas and electricity supply will continue uninterrupted if a supplier fails,” the government said in a statement.

 

Natural gas is crucial to power generation for homes and industry and for heating in winter, with more than 22 million households connected to the grid in 2020.

 

Bills will go up for 11 million households from the 1st October, pressuring an inflation rate which has unexpectedly accelerated above the Bank of England’s 2% target.

 

The knock-on effects are piling up. Meat processors face a shortage of carbon dioxide (C02) as fertiliser plants are taken off line in the face of soaring energy costs. The gas has multiple uses in food packaging and transport, as well as in slaughterhouses.

 

Nick Allen, chief executive of the British Meat Processors Association, told Times Radio on Sunday the industry faces a major crisis within two weeks and the potential for supply disruptions to interrupt delivery of goods at Christmas.

 

“This crisis underscores that the UK food supply chain is at the mercy of a small number of major fertiliser manufacturers in Northern Europe,” he said.

 

Source: WorldOil