Issue - meetings

Robin Hood Energy update

Meeting: 17/09/2018 - Wollaton and Lenton Abbey Area Committee (Area 7) (Item 22)

22 ROBIN HOOD ENERGY UPDATE pdf icon PDF 141 KB

Report of Corporate Director Commercial & Operations

Additional documents:

Minutes:

For the duration of this item Councillor Steve Battlemuch passed the Chairing of the meeting to Vice-Chair Councillor Cate Woodward to enable him, as Chair of Robin Hood Energy, to participate in the presentation.

 

Rob Bain, Finance Director for Robin Hood Energy (RHE), delivered a presentation on the development of RHE as a not-for-profit energy company which was established as a direct result of the City Council Plan objective to ‘tackle fuel poverty’, which is a significant issue within the City.

 

The report and presentation provides details on the establishment of RHE and the achievements to date, particularly when compared to other similar energy companies and the statistics by ward across the City of fuel poverty, with Wollaton East and Lenton Abbey ward ranking 9th and Wollaton West ward ranking 20th for fuel poverty out of 20 wards in the City.

 

The following points were highlighted and questions responded to:

 

(a)  Having been established for only 3 years, RHE now has over 115,000 customers (23,000 are in Nottingham City) and has made a surplus of £202,000, which will be reinvested in the company, including voluntarily signing up to the ‘warm home discount’ scheme ahead of the required timescale;

 

(b)  RHE is also operating as a white label company, which is where a service is produced by one company that other companies rebrand. As listed in the report, RHE currently delivers energy services to nine white label partners which are then able to deliver cheaper energy to their citizens, whilst making a small profit;

 

(c)  Fuel poverty is summarised as having required fuel costs above the average and if those costs are met, it would result in a residual income below the poverty line;

 

(d)  RHE voluntarily introduced a cap on pre-payment meter charges which the energy regulator, Ofgem, then applied across the industry;

 

(e)  By the nature of the company, energy prices are very competitive, citizens of the City are eligible for the lowest price fuel tariffs and it is estimated that City households can save an average of £87 per year by joining RHE;

 

(f)  RHE is consistently priced cheaper than all of the big six energy companies. Whilst some energy companies offer an initial low-priced transfer incentive to energy customers, this is often provided at a loss and prices rise significantly once the transfer period is finished. RHE is requesting that Ofgem regulate this practice, as it is misleading to customers, and where some companies operating this practice have then collapsed, it has resulted in additional costs to the energy industry and customers;

 

(g)  RHE has a focus on the environment and can now announce that it has a wholly green offering for fixed tariffs, with energy provided from wind or solar generation;

 

(h)  It is a misconception that the City Council has had to cut budgets and services as a result of lending start-up funds to RHE. RHE borrows money from Nottingham City Council at a higher rate than the City Council borrows that  ...  view the full minutes text for item 22