Preventing fuel disconnection
Note: Ofgem has published guidance, Help with Bills - England and Wales - August 2022,1Available at to help front-line advisers give correct advice to clients who need support with higher bills and signpost them to where they can get help. With effect from 15 December 2020, to support clients with prepayment meters and people with fuel debt Ofgem expects suppliers to:
•offer emergency credit to clients struggling to top up prepayment meters;
•offer clients ‘friendly hours credit’ provided overnight, at weekends and on public holidays when their meters have run out or are running low;
•offer extra prepayment credit to clients in vulnerable circumstances to give them time to make alternative arrangements to pay; and
•ensure they put clients in debt on realistic and sustainable repayment plans, including making proactive contact with clients and setting repayment rates based on ability to pay.
The legislation governing the supply of gas and electricity states that supplies should not be disconnected while there is a genuine dispute about the amount due.2Sch 6 EA 1989; Sch 2B GA 1986 If there is any question about the amount claimed, such a dispute should immediately be registered with the relevant supplier and confirmed in writing. The supplier should be asked not to disconnect the supply until the dispute has been resolved. Before being offered a prepayment meter, the client should have been offered some form of repayment option (including deductions from benefits) to pay the arrears and cover the ongoing consumption. If this breaks down, some suppliers automatically offer a prepayment meter as the only remaining option. You should consider explaining why the arrangement broke down (eg, it was unrealistic in the first place) and urge the supplier to enter into a new arrangement based on a financial statement.
Before disconnecting, the supplier must:
•have regard to Ofgem guidance on the fitting of prepayment meters (see here); •comply with its code of practice (including providing information about reconnection);
•only fit a prepayment meter if it is ‘safe and reasonably practicable’ to do so (see here); •provide seven days’ notice of the date of disconnection;
•obtain a warrant of entry if the client refuses access;
•give a further seven days’ notice of its intention to use it.
A warrant of entry is granted by the magistrates’ court and allows the supplier to enter the client’s home (by force if necessary) to disconnect the supply. Although the supplier must give the client written notice that it intends to apply for a warrant, it does not have to give the client notice of the actual application. You can, however, telephone the court in advance of an application, ask to speak to the magistrate who would deal with any application and make representations on behalf of the client – eg, that they are a vulnerable person and the supplier has unreasonably refused to agree to a repayment arrangement.
The client cannot be disconnected if:
•the bill is genuinely disputed;
•the debt is owed to a different supplier. A supplier who wants to retain the power to disconnect should object to the supply being switched;
•the debt is due from a previous occupier and the client has agreed to take over the supply;
•the debt is for something other than the supply of gas or electricity – ie, it does not relate to fuel consumption. Note: the supply can be disconnected for non-payment under a ‘green deal plan’ for energy efficiency improvements to the property made under the Energy Act 2011;
•a repayment plan has been agreed. Under its licence conditions, when arranging a repayment plan, the supplier must take into account the client’s ability to pay;
•the client has agreed to have a prepayment meter fitted and it is safe and reasonably practicable to do so. The meter should be calibrated to recover the arrears at the rate the client can afford, taking into account their ability to repay;
•the client has an existing vulnerability which relates to their mental capacity and/or psychological state and the experience of being disconnected (or having a prepayment meter forcibly installed) would be severely traumatic and make their condition significantly worse;3Condition 28B.1 Standard Conditions of Supply Licence •it is between 1 October and 31 March, and the supplier either knows or has reason to believe there is someone of pension age living either alone in the property or with others over pension age or under 18;
•it is between 1 October and 31 March and someone living in the property is either severely disabled or chronically sick, unless all other reasonable steps have been taken to recover the arrears.
Clients in the last two categories are likely to be on the Priority Services Register.
Energy UK (the trade association for the UK energy industries) has drawn up The Vulnerability Commitment, a voluntary agreement under which signatories commit to:
•‘only use HCEOs to recover debts where appropriate for a vulnerable customer, taking account of any wider vulnerabilities that may be exacerbated by Court enforcement action’;
•‘never knowingly disconnect a vulnerable customer at any time of year where the household has children under the age of 6 (or under the age of 16 during the Winter Moratorium – ie between 1 October and 31 March inclusive) or where for reasons of age, health, disability or severe financial insecurity that customer is unable to safeguard their personal welfare or the personal welfare of other members of the household’;
•‘never knowingly disconnect the non-domestic supply for reasons outside the domestic household’s control, if it is determined that a member of a domestic household, which takes its energy through a non-domestic supply is vulnerable’;
•‘having a strategy and effective arrangements in place for signposting and referring customers to relevant third party support, including debt advice agencies’.
For more details, see .
No one who is prepared to have a prepayment meter or who is eligible for direct payments from their benefits or who can afford to pay for current consumption plus a payment towards the arrears should ever be disconnected. Energy trust funds or other charities may be able to help with payment of bills or to prevent ‘self-disconnection’ – ie, if clients do not use gas or electricity because they cannot afford to pay. In the case of prepayment meters, self-disconnection can be as a result of arrears being recovered at too high a rate. Suppliers can always be asked to confirm how arrears are being recovered, and asked to recalibrate the meter if appropriate or proactively reconsider whether a prepayment meter is safe and reasonably practicable – eg, if the client is self-disconnecting.
If negotiations with the fuel supplier are unsuccessful, contact Citizens Advice or the Energy Ombudsman (see Appendix 1), which have the power to intervene when disconnection is threatened. See also CPAG’s Fuel Rights Handbook for more information.