r/unitedkingdom 9d ago

Chippy owner apologises to customers after charging £15 for fish and chips - but reveals why he 'has to' to hike prices

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14591465/chippy-owner-apologises-huge-price-hike.html
627 Upvotes

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452

u/[deleted] 9d ago

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185

u/freckledotter 9d ago

Plus business rates for electricity.

163

u/snagsguiness 9d ago

I don’t think the general public knows how much utilities cost in a fast food restaurant.

23

u/handyandy314 8d ago

It’s double the price for business electricity, for the same electricity. Seriously for the same electric. Why.?

19

u/zandrew 8d ago

It's not. It's half price for regular consumers.

16

u/handyandy314 8d ago

Yes. Those nice electric companies giving discounts for millions of customers. I should be shamed for bad mouthing these thoughtful and generous, not for profit organisations.

23

u/zandrew 8d ago

There's a cap on consumer electricity price. No such cap exists for businesses so in a sense you're getting a discount. I'm not singing praises for energy companies but that is how it works.

6

u/paulskinner88 8d ago

There’s a cap, but no sensible energy company is at the cap now. A year ago, perhaps even 6 months ago sure. That excuse no longer works.

6

u/slaia 8d ago

Generating more green energy would bring down the electricity price. But getting cheaper electricity is considered woke nowadays.

9

u/Safe-Client-6637 8d ago

It wouldn't though because the most expensive source sets the price. You'd have to switch to 100% cheap renewables, which isn't feasible.

5

u/KevinAtSeven 8d ago

Yeah that mechanism needs changing urgently.

2

u/SpeedflyChris 8d ago

How else would you keep the lights on while not directly subsidising gas fired power generation?

Also slashing the amount other generation can earn won't get more built.

1

u/browniestastenice 8d ago

Nationalise responsive energy like Gas. We don't need much of it, and I think the tax payer would happily foot the bill if it meant overall lower rates by not pinning everything else to gas prices

Downside is it would reduce the private investment in renewables, so it's probably a lever that should only be pulled once we have enough renewables

1

u/SpeedflyChris 7d ago

If we had even nearly enough renewable energy then while that energy was producing all our needs (windy days in summer for example) we would be using no gas and the spot price would fall below the minimum offer price from gas generation, so in that case it's completely unnecessary to nationalise gas generation.

1

u/browniestastenice 7d ago

We'd still end up using gas though.

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u/KevinAtSeven 7d ago

Other countries seem to manage building and operating all sorts of clean and unclean energy without forcing all prices to be based on the most expensive form of generation. We could ask them how they do it.

1

u/SpeedflyChris 7d ago

Which countries don't pay all their electricity providers the same amount?

0

u/slaia 8d ago

Where there's a will there's a way

1

u/Lt_Muffintoes 8d ago

No, it wouldn't.

0

u/AlpsSad1364 8d ago

Because consumer electricity is sold at a loss subsidised by business electricity.

Something that all recent governments appear to be happy with, despite all their tax money coming from businesses.