Le bollette energetiche del Regno Unito potrebbero aumentare di 500 sterline a causa della guerra tra Iran e Stati Uniti, avverte il think tank

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/energy-bills-uk-rise-iran-us-war-resolution-foundation-b2931560.html

di tylerthe-theatre

27 commenti

  1. Time007time007 on

    Great. Why not. Just take everything from us, let us all be destitute and miserable. What a life here.

  2. The-Furry-Circle on

    I mentioned this the other day in another thread, but heating oil (kerosene) has jumped from £600 for 1000litres last week to £1274 as of this post. Obviously, supplies aren’t disrupted this much yet so there’s some opportunistic profiteering going on by the looks of it.

  3. MAXSuicide on

    Just as we got told bills were coming down, Trump does Trump things.

    The endless cycle this 21st century of taking one step forwards and two steps back. 

  4. ArcticAmoeba56 on

    Only because energy companies will insist on retaining theie huge profit margins, and pass anyband all increased costs to the end consumer.

  5. klepto_entropoid on

    War is good for business. Unfortunately for the rest of us, Israels wars will never end.

  6. apuddleofwaterx on

    Why? Isn’t our energy mostly green and nuclear now?

  7. The media are shitting on Starmer this morning for not being “war ready”.

    I’m glad we’re not fuckin war ready. This shouldn’t be happening. This action will do nothing but further destabilize the world politically and financially.

    I want Starmer to tell Trump he’s a knob end and to fully investigate his crimes in the unredacted Epstein files.

  8. GoodRabbitSoup on

    I for one think it’s only fair to maintain shareholder value for the energy companies at all costs

  9. joeythemouse on

    Thanks Donny. We’ll all forget about the child rape now.

  10. buffetite on

    I was on a gas tracker with no price cap. I’ve just fixed for 12 months because I don’t want to run the risk of crazy prices.

    Not sure with electric is going to do though. I’m on IOG. 

  11. luckystar2591 on

    I had this argument with another redditor just a few days ago.

    Them: No energy prices are going to be low forever now because it was the green subsidies fault

    Me: No, because the price of energy is slaved to the price of gas, even though most of our supply is renewable they’ll still find an excuse to put it up.

    Them: you don’t know how it works!

    I thought I’d have to wait until September to be proved right..but alas the oil lobby worked quicker on Trump this time.

  12. TheMysteriousGirl on

    “Could” or “Should”.

    Can these “think tanks” start pressuring the government to impose more severe caps on energy profiteering instead of fear monging price increases so these energy companies can get a bigger profit than last year?

    We all know think tanks are often paid for by companies to set the mentality for something. Do something. This is a joke.

  13. Say10sadvocate on

    But I thought he secured (stole) Venezuela’s oil before destabilizing the middle east?

  14. MarcusSuperbuz on

    Well given the Yanks and the Israelis started this shit, *they* can pick up the bill.

  15. PlanUnhappy on

    Trump is wrong on almost everything, but he does have a point on UK’s energy policy.

    It is bonkers we overpay another country for energy that comes from the North Sea reserves because we refuse to extract from the North Sea, all to protect the environment.

    Meanwhile, India, China, US etc al. pollute with no care in the world.

  16. MCMLIXXIX on

    I wish I was privileged enough to not feel the dumb shit privileged people do to non privileged people

  17. As soon as I heard the US hit Iran I rushed to get a fixed tariff.

  18. Conscious-Ball8373 on

    “Could” but won’t. They will be unstable for a bit but the idea that energy prices will do that depends on Iran’s ability to close the Hormuz strait. Technically they’ve already done that, but the response so far has been “Yeah, you and what navy?” Since their entire navy is currently sitting on the bottoms of their harbours, they don’t have a great comeback to this.

    They could perhaps adapt drones and their missile stocks to this, but (a) they’re ripping through their stocks pretty quickly on other things, (b) they’re losing launch sites at a pretty fair clip and (c) the US has two carrier groups in the Persian gulf, which is probably enough to prevent much damage being done.

  19. gogul1980 on

    The privatisation of necessities was truly a huge mistake. It worked for a little while as companies fought to get contracts and be competitively priced but they got too much power too quickly and now refuse to take any “hits” when the markets are bad. They pass it all on the consumer and we are forced to pay stupidly rich people even more money year on year.

  20. BizzarePlatypus on

    This is one of many reasons we need to utilise renewables more. Renewable energy is simply more secure than fossil fuels. 

    Unsure about where our supply of nuclear comes from so can’t comment on that side. 

  21. My tin foil conspiracy mind now thinks these conflicts are all just a way to extract more money out of everyday people. As soon as prices start to drop or stabilise, let’s start something to make them to rise again, and then rinse and repeat.

    I was also informed that the Peace President had already ended this conflict, ended must have been used in a loose way.

  22. Primary-Effect-3691 on

    Remember this when Reform want to stop building wind power and The Greens want to shut down the nuclear power plants 

  23. boothjop on

    People that want to walk back from our green commitments don’t see that renewable energy such as solar is designed to mitigate this dependency on oil and the volatility that comes with it.

  24. WellMax81 on

    The headline should read “UK Energy Companies poised for record profits over Iran-US war”

    I hate this place.

  25. CaptainHindsight92 on

    Food prices too. Food like everything else needs transportation so it will rise because of that alone but in addition 33% of the global supply of fertiliser passed through the straight.

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