Ofgem confirms £97.5m renewables obligation shortfall

0

The Renewables Obligation buyout fund was £97.5m light for 2018-19, Ofgem has confirmed, with many of the companies that owe money now defunct.

That leaves other suppliers to pick up the tab, although three firms  – Nabuh Energy, Planet 9 Energy and Hudson Energy, which is now owned by Shell – paid  £38.7m after the deadline, which will be redistributed to suppliers at a later date.

Sixteen firms went bust, or had licences revoked, owing most of the remainder. These were:

Brilliant Energy, Economy Energy Trading, Electraphase, Eversmart Energy, Extra Energy Supply, GEN4U, Iresa, One Select, Our Power Energy Supply, Rutherford Energy Supply, Snowdrop Energy Supply, Solarplicity Supply, Spark Energy Energy Supply, TOTO Energy, Ure Energy and Usio Energy.

Ofgem said it hoped to recover some of the money from the firms’ administrators.

Meanwhile, 33 suppliers owed some £38m in capacity market payments when the deadline passed late November.

RO shortfall details here.

Related stories:

33 suppliers owe £38m in CM payments

Toto goes bust, Robin Hood bailed out

Ofgem revokes URE’s licence over unpaid RO bill

£100m tab for failed energy suppliers

Ofgem outlines new rules to prevent another house of cards

Energy supplier debt crisis “creating house of cards”

Our Power goes bust

Economy Energy latest failed supplier

Extra Energy goes bust

Spark Energy shuts down domestic supply business

Ofgem tightens supply licence rules as money goes missing

Big cracks emerging in energy retail

Risk mismanagement: More suppliers will go bust

Utility Warehouse: More independent suppliers will go pop

GB Energy goes belly up

Click here to see if you qualify for a free subscription to the print magazine, or to renew.

Follow us at @EnergystMedia. For regular bulletins, sign up for the free newsletter.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here