Fuel price rises 'inescapable' if war continues, energy boss warns
An energy boss has said price rises may be ‘inescapable’ if the war in the Middle East drags on, as the government insisted there is no need to ration fuel.
Housing Minister Steve Reed said there is a contingency plan ready, but urged people to ‘buy their fuel just like they always would’.
There are increasing concerns about how the Iran conflict could affect the cost of living, with the prime minister due to hold a Cobra meeting next week to discuss plans to help households.
Iran has kept up its stranglehold on shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, causing oil prices to spike.
On Sunday, the chief executive of Centrica PLC, which owns British Gas, said global oil supplies are down 20% because of the conflict.
Chris O’Shea told BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: ‘Cornwall Insight, I think, have predicted that there’s going to be an increase in prices.
‘If it stays as it is then I think that’s inescapable.
‘The world uses about 100 million barrels of oil a day. We’ve lost about 20% of that through the Strait of Hormuz.’
Reed urged people not to start panic-buying fuel.
He told Sky News’ Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips: ‘There’s no need to ration fuel. People should go around and buy their fuel just like they always would.
‘If the situation were to change, then the government would look at what was required in that circumstance.
‘We did intervene when it came to heating oil, because we saw the prices escalating and people were seeing their bills doubling and tripling overnight. We can’t have that, so we stepped in to support people.’
The Conservatives have said the government should scrap ‘green taxes’ to cut costs.
Shadow housing secretary Sir James Cleverly also said North Sea oil and gas fields should be opened.
He told Sky: ‘We’ve said a lot of these green taxes were put in place when the world was in a very, very different state and are now inappropriate and counterproductive, so we’re saying we should reduce those to make sure that we are not imposing additional, unnecessary costs.’
Speaking about North Sea oil and gas fields, he said: ‘The government should be doing those things today which will alleviate the problem in the near future.’
Richard Walker, the cost-of-living tsar, said he has ‘asked the government to consider a temporary profit cap, if required, to stop producers and retailers exploiting the crisis to make windfall profits at the expense of consumers’.
Early on Sunday, Trump wrote on Truth Social that Iran had 48 hours to ‘FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz’, or the US would ‘obliterate’ Iran’s power plants.
Reed would not be drawn on whether he backs the deadline, but said a swift end to the war would be the best way to alleviate price rises.
Centrica shares closed down 2.0% at 204.60 pence on Friday in London.
By George Lithgow, Ellie Ng and Pol Allingham, Press Association
source: PA
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