UK’s Truss says energy firm profit is not evil as bill forecasts soar

By William James and Susanna Twidale

LONDON (Reuters) -British leadership candidate Liz Truss, the front-runner to become prime minister, said that while energy giants should be held to account their profits should not be seen as either dirty or evil.

Her comments came as analysts forecast a cap on the most widely used household energy bills could reach over 5,000 pounds ($6,095.50) a year in 2023, up 150% compared with current levels.

This month British energy giants Centrica, BP and Shell have published bumper profits, largely due to high wholesale gas prices, prompting renewed calls from opposition parties and charities for the government to impose tougher windfall taxes on energy firms.

“Of course, the energy giants, if they’re in an oligopoly, should be held to account and I would make sure they’re rigorously held to account,” Truss told an event on Thursday for Conservative Party members, who are voting over the next few weeks to decide the country’s next leader.

“But, the way we bandy the word around ‘profit’ as if it’s something that’s dirty and evil, we shouldn’t be doing that as Conservatives,” she said.

The government introduced a 25% windfall tax on oil and gas producers’ profits in May, which helped to fund a package of support for households. Since then, wholesale gas prices have more than doubled.

Analysts at consultancy Auxilione forecast the price cap, which will be updated every three months from October, could hit 5,038 pounds a year in April 2023 due to soaring energy prices across Europe. The current cap level is 1,977 pounds.

Finance minister Nadhim Zahawi said on Thursday that energy companies have agreed to work with the government to help the people who need it the most, ahead of a further surge in energy bills going into the winter.

“It seems there is little appreciation for just how impossible that task really is and that energy companies and the government have little control over this in such a globally influenced market,” Auxilione analysts said.

($1 = 0.8203 pounds)

(Reporting by Susanna Twidale and William James; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Mark Heinrich)

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