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SRCThe Guardian - World News
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ENT12
WED · 2026-05-27 · 06:02 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0527-79510
News/Energy price cap in Great Britain to rise by 13% from July
NSR-2026-0527-79510News Report·EN·Economic Impact

Energy price cap in Great Britain to rise by 13% from July

The energy price cap in Great Britain will increase by 13% from July to September, raising the average annual gas and electricity bill to £1,862. This rise, the steepest summer increase in four years, is attributed by Ofgem to soaring global energy market prices, significantly influenced by the war in Iran.

Jillian Ambrose and Joanna PartridgeThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-27 · 06:02 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Energy price cap in Great Britain to rise by 13% from July
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
778words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

The energy price cap in Great Britain will increase by 13% from July to September, raising the average annual gas and electricity bill to £1,862. This rise, the steepest summer increase in four years, is attributed by Ofgem to soaring global energy market prices, significantly influenced by the war in Iran. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband stated the conflict is causing unwelcome price spikes and emphasized the need for clean energy to achieve stable bills. Ofgem determines the cap based on wholesale market costs, and the new rates will see electricity charges rise to 26.11p per kWh and gas to 7.33p per kWh for direct debit customers. The situation is expected to worsen for winter, with potential for further price volatility depending on Middle Eastern developments.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Economic Impact
Conflict
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.80 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Petrol prices have risen by almost 20% and diesel by over 30% due to the energy crisis.

statisticRAC
Confidence
1.00
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Ofgem's interim chief executive Tim Jarvis said the rise is almost entirely driven by increased global gas prices on the back of the Middle East conflict.

quoteTim Jarvis
Confidence
1.00
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Energy Secretary Ed Miliband stated that clean homegrown power is the way to get bills down for good.

quoteEd Miliband
Confidence
1.00
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The energy price cap in Great Britain will rise by 13% from July, increasing the average annual bill to £1,862.

statistic
Confidence
1.00
05

The rise in the price cap is attributed to soaring global energy market prices caused by the war on Iran.

factual
Confidence
0.90
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Full report

4 min read · 778 words
Households will face the steepest summer rise in energy charges in four years after months of soaring market prices caused the government’s energy price cap for Great Britain to climb by 13%.Under the cap the average gas and electricity bill will increase to the equivalent of £1,862 a year from July until the end of September to take account of the rise in global energy market prices caused by the Iran" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="121993" data-entity-type="event">war on Iran, up from £1,641 a year in April to June.The energy secretary, Ed Miliband, said it was essential to de-escalate the conflict in the Middle East to bring oil and gas prices down.“The rise in the price cap because of a war we did not choose is deeply unwelcome news for households across the country.“The way to get bills down for good and avoid these price spikes is to go further and faster with this government’s drive for clean homegrown power we control,” Miliband added.The energy regulator for Great Britain, Ofgem, determines the maximum a supplier can charge for each unit of gas and electricity based on the cost of supplying energy to homes, including the average wholesale market costs in the months leading up to the start of each new cap. The cap also incorporates the maximum daily standing charge (the flat daily fees levied for a connection regardless of how much or little energy people use).Under the new energy price cap, households that pay via direct debit will see electricity charges rise from the current rate of 24.67p per kilowatt hour to 26.11p per kWh, while gas charges will rise from 5.74p per kWh to 7.33p per kWh.The jump to £1,862 a year equates to a rise of £18 a month for the average household using electricity and gas, or £221 a year. It is the highest level for the cap since the first quarter of 2024, when it was £1,924. Back in 2022 the cap peaked at £4,279 in the first quarter of 2023 but bills were restricted to £2,500 a year, on average, by the government’s energy price guarantee.The war in Iran has caused the biggest energy supply shock on record by choking exports of oil and gas from the Gulf. In Europe, gas prices have more than doubled from pre-crisis levels, and are about three times higher than before Russian gas exports to Europe halted after its Ukraine" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="129729" data-entity-type="event">invasion of Ukraine.Tim Jarvis, Ofgem’s interim chief executive, said the rise in the cap was “almost entirely driven” by the rise in global gas prices on the back of the Middle East conflict.“We have seen wholesale prices increase. They have been very volatile but they have been broadly much higher than they would normally be at this time of year, and that is what is filtering through now into the adjustment to the price cap,” Jarvis told BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme.For motorists, the crisis has already caused petrol to rise by almost 20% at the pump to an average of 159.43p a litre on Tuesday, according to the RAC, while the diesel price has increased by more than 30% to 184.96p a litre.While the rising cost of energy is expected to be painful for households this summer, the bigger concern is bills from October, when households typically start using more energy in autumn and can expect higher bills as a result.Jarvis said the next quarterly change to the cap, due in October, would depend to a large extent on what happens in the Middle East, progress towards a peace deal, the speed with which the strait of Hormuz reopens and how quickly the market recovers.“It is unfortunately now looking like a more long-term disruption to markets than we might originally have hoped,” he added.Rising bills are expected to compound the record levels of energy debt amassed by households since Russia’s Ukraine" class="entity-link entity-event" data-entity-id="129729" data-entity-type="event">invasion of Ukraine ignited a gas supply crisis for Europe.Jarvis said that people now have an opportunity to prepare for what may be coming in the winter, possibly by fixing their energy bills. That would protect customers if the cap rose again, at the risk of missing out on savings if prices fell.“You’ve obviously got the risk there that if prices do come down but it is likely that we are going to see elevated prices this winter. We’re not at the moment seeing the sort of price rises that we saw following the Russia-Ukraine war, but it remains a very uncertain situation,” he said.Unpaid energy bills reached a record high of £4.5bn earlier this year, according to the latest official data. These debts are partly paid down by other bill payers through an annual £52 charge included in the energy price cap.
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

8 terms
energy price cap
1.00
energy charges
0.90
global energy prices
0.80
middle east conflict
0.70
ofgem
0.60
clean homegrown power
0.50
wholesale market costs
0.40
energy supply shock
0.40
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