6.15am EDT
06:15
Ofgem boss says global gas price hike ‘far, far above’ any forecasts
6.02am EDT
06:02
Ofgem boss implies millions of people could be affected by energy companies going bust
6.01am EDT
06:01
Ofgem boss says latest price hike unprecedented
5.47am EDT
05:47
Ofgem boss casts doubt on PM’s claim gas price crisis only temporary
4.47am EDT
04:47
New Unite general secretary Sharon Graham says she won’t attend Labour conference – but it’s ‘not a snub’
4.38am EDT
04:38
Shapps says protesters could face jail for blocking roads after injunction granted
4.31am EDT
04:31
George Eustice implies Joe Biden does not fully understand ‘complicated’ Northern Ireland issue
6.30am EDT
06:30
At the business committee Alan Brown (SNP) asked the Ofgem CEO, Jonathan Brearley, about claims that the crisis could see the number of energy companies in the UK reduced to about 10.
Brearley said that the situation was “highly changeable” and that, as a result, he did not think predictions like that were credible.
6.25am EDT
06:25
Emma Pinchbeck, chief executive of supplier trade body Energy UK, told the Commons business committee, that the Government and Ofgem were warned as early as two years ago that the energy sector was fragile. She explained:
I took this job a year ago. When I was hired, the chairman of Energy UK said that your biggest challenge is going to be the vulnerability of the retail market. I know that for a year or more before that my team have been making the case to the regulator and the government that the sector is fragile …
A lot of that is about market design. No competitive market would be making an average return of minus 1%. There’s a short-term crisis here, which is in some ways out of our control, it’s to do with the gas prices, but it’s been exacerbated and arguably caused by our regulatory design. That is a resilience and security of supply risk in the future. It’s terrible news for customers in the long run.
When we get through this, whatever support we put in place in the short term to make sure that customers are looked after, we desperately need to stop dismissing retailers when they say the market design is not fit for purpose, the market design is harming customers, the market design means we’re not making any margin and the market design leaves us vulnerable and fragile.
6.15am EDT
06:15
Ofgem boss says global gas price hike ‘far, far above’ any forecasts
Brearley told MPs that Ofgem does try to forecast what will happen to price of gas, but that what was happening now was beyond what was expected. He said:
We do do forecasts of the overall gas price, and we do look at the market projections at the time, but this is a discontinuity. It is far, far above any of our even most conservative projections. Because it’s not just the issue of supply; it is supply plus the demand factors, plus some what sound like quite granular trade issues, around simply the number of ships that you can get on the water, all the issues around ports at the moment. So it is a continuation of events that have led to this, and it is beyond what any of us thought would happen at this time of year.
6.02am EDT
06:02
Ofgem boss implies millions of people could be affected by energy companies going bust
Brearley told MPs that “well above” hundreds of thousands of customers could see their energy supplier go bust. He said:
We do expect a large number of customers to be affected, we’ve already seen hundreds of thousands of customers affected, that may well go well above that. It’s very hard for me to put a figure on it.
UPDATE: This is from Paul Kelso, Sky’s business correspondent.
(@pkelso)
At @CommonsBEIS @ofgem CEO Jonathan Brearley declines to put a figure on how many people could be signed to failing energy providers, beyond “many more” than hundreds of thousands. Privately industry estimates it could be six million households https://t.co/xTBuidolU3
Updated
at 6.08am EDT
6.01am EDT
06:01
Ofgem boss says latest price hike unprecedented
Jonathan Brearley, the Ofgem CEO, told the business committee that what was happening to gas prices was unlike previous price hikes. He said:
I do think this is a different kind of change. The sector has faced shocks, and in fact we’ve talked about how we managed through the Covid crisis, which had a big impact on the energy sector overall.
But when you see that change – I encouraging you just to have a look at the change in gas price – it really is something that we don’t think we’ve seen before at this pace.
Brearley said this would feed through to customers. And he said many suppliers were under “huge pressure” as a result.
5.47am EDT
05:47
Ofgem boss casts doubt on PM’s claim gas price crisis only temporary
The Commons business committee is taking evidence now from Ofgem, the energy regulator, on the gas price crisis.
Darren Jones (Lab), the chair, started by asking why Boris Johnson felt confident saying yesterday that this crisis would just be temporary.
Jonathan Brearley, the Ofgem CEO, says gas prices are six times what they were last year. They rose 70% in August, he said.
He said many factors contributed to that, including increasing global demand and some restrictions with supply. “So it is very, very hard to predict how long that will last,” he said.
Jones asked again, if that was the case, why Johnson said yesterday the problem would only be temporary.
Brearley said that, in commodity markets, when you see a price spike, “history has suggested that those spikes do go away”.
5.20am EDT
05:20
John McDonnell, who was shadow chancellor when Jeremy Corbyn was Labour leader, told the Today programme this morning that he thought Sir Keir Starmer was making a “huge mistake” with his plans to change the leadership election rules. He said:
[Starmer] was elected on one member, one vote. He never mentioned any of these reforms in that election itself. He is opening himself up to challenges of dishonestly on this.
If it comes to the point where our members can’t trust him, you know what the Tories are going to say, if your members can’t trust you, how can the electorate.
Ned Simons from HuffPost has more from McDonnell’s interview here.
5.14am EDT
05:14
Priti Patel, the home secretary, has also welcomed the granting of the injunction against the motorway protesters.
(@pritipatel)
I can confirm this Government and @NationalHways are taking action to bring the ongoing #M25 protests to end with an important injunction so people can get moving again.
We will not tolerate lives being put at risk.
Those who continue to do so risk imprisonment.
5.13am EDT
05:13
Grant Shapps, the transport secretary, told the transport committee this morning that the injunction granted against the M25 protesters (see 9.38am) should bring an end to the demonstrations. He said:
It barely goes without saying, it’s irresponsible, dangerous and completely counterproductive. It’s unacceptable and I hope the injunction will bring it to a close.
Earlier in the process there was a somewhat different approach being taken. Yesterday the police were on the scene much more quickly. The injunction will greatly strengthen their hand …
We will review the powers because clearly it’s unacceptable for people to be able to walk on to not just a major highway but a motorway, stop traffic, be released the next day and do the same thing again. An injunction may just be an interim way of doing that.
4.47am EDT
04:47
New Unite general secretary Sharon Graham says she won’t attend Labour conference – but it’s ‘not a snub’
Sharon Graham, the new Unite leader, has said she will not be attending this year’s Labour conference. Explaining her decision, she told the BBC:
We shouldn’t always do what we have always done just because we have always done it.
I am days into my leadership – we currently have 16 industrial disputes going on, from Tesco drivers to Weetabix to locksmiths in Scunthorpe and Wolverhampton.
What I need to do is be with those workers in dispute and personally take leadership.
Graham said this was “definitely not a snub” to Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader. She said she had had a meeting with him on Monday that she described as “cordial”. But that was before Starmer announced plans to change the Labour leadership elections rules – plans that Graham criticised yesterday.
Graham also told the BBC that, if there is a vote at conference on David Evans, the party’s general secretary, Unite would vote to remove him. That was because of the way he was implementing redundancies, she said.
Updated
at 4.47am EDT
4.38am EDT
04:38
Shapps says protesters could face jail for blocking roads after injunction granted
Grant Shapps, the transport secretary, has announced that National Highways have been granted a court injunction against environmental protesters. That means activists who block roads could face jail.
(@grantshapps)
Invading a motorway is reckless & puts lives at risk. I asked National Highways to seek an injunction against M25 protestors which a judge granted last night. Effective later today, activists will face contempt of court with possible imprisonment if they flout.
4.31am EDT
04:31
George Eustice implies Joe Biden does not fully understand ‘complicated’ Northern Ireland issue
Good morning. Yesterday Joe Biden told Boris Johnson at the White House about his concerns that the UK’s stance on the Northern Ireland protocol could undermine the Good Friday agreement. It is a concern shared by Democrats and Republicans in Washington, and one that has been expressed many times. Johnson told Biden diplomatically that he too wanted to protect the Good Friday agreement. But in an interview this morning George Eustice, the environment secretary, said that Biden was “wrong” about this, and he implied the US president did not understand the issue.
Eustice told Sky News:
[Biden] is probably at the moment just reading the headlines, reading what the EU is saying, reading what Ireland might be saying, which is that they would like the Northern Ireland protocol to work in the way the EU envisage.
We think he is wrong because the truth is that unless we have a sustainable solution that enables trade to continue between GB and Northern Ireland then we are going to have issues, and that itself would become a challenge to the Belfast agreement.
We will obviously explain to the United States effectively it is tantamount to saying that potatoes grown in one part of the United States can’t be sold in another part of the United States.
When you explain some of those provisions in detail, it is understood by the US government that that clearly does not make any sense and therefore should be revisited.
Eustice also said it was “very complicated”, adding: “I’m not sure he does fully appreciate all of that”.
Eustice was just saying what cabinet ministers think. But it is unusual for any of them to be so blunt (and patronising) about the US president in public.
As my colleague Rowena Mason reports, in his interviews this morning Eustice also said the bailout of the private US firm that supplies carbon dioxide to the food industry will run into “many millions of pounds”.
Here is the agenda for the day.
9.30am: Grant Shapps, the transport secretary, gives evidence to the Commons transport committee.
9.30am: Matthew Roycroft, permanent secretary at the Home Office, gives evidence to the Commons home affairs committee.
10.30am: Ofgem, Energy UK and National Energy Action give evidence to the Commons business committee about the UK gas market. At 11.30am Kwasi Kwarteng, the business secretary, gives evidence.
12pm: Dominic Raab, the deputy prime minister, faces Angela Rayner, Labour’s deputy leader, at PMQs.
Lunchtime (UK time): Boris Johnson is due to give media interviews in the US.
2pm: Prof Chris Whitty, the chief medical officer for England, Prof Jonathan Van-Tam, his deputy, and Prof Wei Shen Lim, chair of the JCVI’s Covid sub-committee, give evidence to the Commons education committee about vaccinating children.
Later Johnson will be addressing the UN general assembly in New York, but his speech is not expected until about 9pm UK time.
For the latest Covid developments, do read our global live blog.
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Updated
at 4.40am EDT