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What help can households expect with fuel bills?

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CitrixNews Staff
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What help can households expect with fuel bills?
What help can households expect with fuel bills?24 minutes agoShareSaveJohn CampbellEconomics and business editor, BBC News NIShareSaveGetty Images A woman's hand touches a white radiator. The woman's arm and legs can only be seen. She is wearing a cream cardigan and dark trousers.Getty ImagesHouseholds in Northern Ireland are finding it much more expensive to heat their homes

Energy prices have been brought into sharp focus due to the war in the Middle East, and governments have been looking at how to help ease the pain for consumers.

The Irish government has announced it is cutting excise duty on petrol and diesel in a bid to help people with volatile prices.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves has been setting out her approach to helping people in the UK.

What will it mean for households in Northern Ireland?

It won't be a re-run of 2023

In January 2023 all households in Northern Ireland received a £600 cash payment which they could use towards their energy bills.

That was part of a UK government scheme responding to the huge increases in the cost of oil, gas and electricity after Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The original plan was for NI households which used gas heating to get £400 and those with oil heating to get £600.

That proved too complicated so in the end all households got the £600 payment.

In addition, the UK government effectively paid gas and electricity suppliers to sell energy to consumers at below cost.

The National Audit Office has estimated the total cost of the various UK-wide supports at £44bn.

On Tuesday the chancellor was clear that this sort of sweeping, universal support will not be on offer this time.

She said that instead help would be limited to "those who need it most" if energy bills spiral further due to the US-Israel war with Iran.

Help for some with heating oil

Getty Images A person with dirty orange gloves holds onto to a metal hose connected to a heating oil tank.Getty ImagesThe price of home heating oil in Northern Ireland has risen sharply

The UK government has given Stormont ministers just over £17m to help with the cost of heating oil.

If that was to be spread across the almost 500,000 households which use oil it would only be about £35 each.

There is consensus among ministers that the money will have to be targeted if it is to have any real impact.

It is likely that the targeting will involve helping those on means-tested benefits like Universal Credit and Pension Credit.

Accurately targeting those who use home heating oil remains a challenge.

Unlike gas and electricity, there are no central registers of who is an oil customer.

Estimates of the potential support per household range from £95 to £185 but that is very uncertain.

A small cut in electricity costs for everyone

The Sinn Féin economy minister has said all households are in line for a £30 deduction from their electricity bills in July.

This is the Northern Ireland portion of a UK government scheme which was announced long before the current crisis.

The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) had suggested this money could also be targeted, but the minister said that would not be practical due to the conditions attached by the UK Treasury.

The executive is due to discuss this on Thursday.

Oil back above $100 a barrel as conflicting claims emerge on US-Iran talks

£17m support for heating oil costs in NI is 'not enough'

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Northern IrelandCost of Living Fuel

Originally reported by BBC News