Many vulnerable households refrain from using heating due to the high cost of energy, according to the End Fuel Poverty coalition

Nearly 5,000 people died in the UK last winter due to living in cold and damp homes as they could not afford the rising energy costs, the latest report from the End Fuel Poverty Coalition has claimed.

The surge in excess deaths underscores the need to upgrade the UK’s housing stock and implement measures to bring down energy bills, the coalition has warned.

The End Fuel Poverty Coalition includes Greenpeace, WWF, Green Alliance, Save the Children, and Age UK, among others.

Meanwhile, a study by the Warm This Winter campaign noted that excess winter deaths climb when the temperature in the UK drops below four degrees Celsius.

According to Simon Francis, coordinator of the End Fuel Poverty Coalition, as many as 8.3 million adults in the UK are living in poorly insulated, cold, damp homes and, as temperatures drop, conditions go from being uncomfortable to “downright dangerous.”

“While households struggle, ministers are sitting on their hands and leaving matters of life and death to chance. Instead of taking action on energy bills, they have allowed energy firms to restart using the courts to force households onto prepayment meters and have now ruled out reform to energy tariffs to help those most in need,” he told Euronews on Friday.

Meanwhile, with energy bills set to remain far above pre-pandemic levels this year and beyond, such health dangers are expected to persist this winter following a series of cold snaps, experts warn.

The coalition criticized the British government for a lack of “meaningful” action to help households struggling with elevated energy tariffs. Experts noted that officials “would rather play politics with a ridiculous Oil & Gas Licensing Bill that will do nothing to improve energy security or lower bills.”

“We are very concerned at the level of disinterest shown by the government in the welfare of older people at a time when the temperature is dropping well below freezing,” Jan Shortt, General Secretary of the National Pensioners’ Convention, which is part of the Warm This Winter campaign, said.

The coalition’s report also censured the UK government for its refusal to set up a “help to repay” scheme for those in energy debt and also for its unwillingness to implement a proposed emergency energy tariff aimed at bringing down energy bills for vulnerable households.

  • To think this is the country that robbed half the planet.

    Of course when looked at with class analysis the owner-class benefited from the empire while everyone else paid the price one way or another. It just never occurred to me that the British could be so downtrodden.

  • DankZedong @lemmygrad.ml
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    10 months ago

    Hell I can afford to heat my house to an acceptable temperature but parts of it are so badly isolated that I can’t heat them at all. My bathroom gets around 10 degrees Celsius max in the winter. Mold loves it over there. It can’t be healthy at all and there are many houses like it. My landlord won’t do anything.

    CO poisening deaths tripled over here. Many more people probably got sick and died of some preventable disease.

    But we need to make profit, so 🤷

  • ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    Damn, we did almost 2 9/11s to the British working class by blowing up that pipeline. Not that the energy companies wouldn’t have price gouged people out of life on their own, but that really accelerated it. Counting knock on effects, the real number is surely far higher. A fatal friendship

  • Idliketothinkimsmart@lemmygrad.ml
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    10 months ago

    How tragic, even here in the US, it’s about 700 people who die annually from freezing. Things must be really bad in the UK if this is happening. I think China needs to intervene to implement democracy :(.

    • albigu@lemmygrad.ml
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      10 months ago

      AFAIK, basically they’re having to buy way more expensive liquefied gas all the way from their friendly ally, the US, rather than the cheap energy they could get from evil evil Russia. People have been pointing at the Cost of Living crisis in the UK since before the pandemic, but shit really hit the fan once they sanctioned Russia and blew up their own pipeline.

    • Barabas [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Another point is that homes in the UK are so badly insulated you on average have to use three times as much energy to keep it warm than in Germany for example. And the people who are most unlikely to afford heating will live in the worst insulated houses.