National Grid’s profits rise to £3.4bn amid soaring energy bills

Business

National Grid has seen its annual pre-tax profits increase by 107% to £3.4bn.

The energy network operator attributed much of the rise to its £7.8bn purchase of Western Power Distribution (WPD), which was recently fined £14.9m for failing to help vulnerable customers.

National Grid, which delivers electricity to households and businesses, previously said profits in the last financial year would be higher than expected due to inflation.

The consumer price index has reached a 40-year high of 9%, with growing energy bills playing a large role in the surge.

The energy price cap went up last October and again in April, this time by an unprecedented 54%.

Customers pay an average of 3.3% of their total bill to the National Grid as part of an electricity transmission charge, according to the company’s data from the 2020/21 financial year.

The figure was based on an average bill of £612 – which has since gone up.

More on Energy

The charge is subject to approval by the energy regulator, Ofgem, and covers the cost of building and maintaining the network.

Today’s announcement could raise questions about whether the company should be using increased profits to reduce costs for households.

National Grid’s board of directors has recommended increasing dividend payments to shareholders by 3.7%.

Chief executive John Pettigrew said £24bn would be put into green projects to decarbonise energy networks in the UK and elsewhere over the next five years.

He said the investment would make National Grid the biggest investor in the transition to a green economy among FTSE 100 companies.

“Of course we are going to try to do that as efficiently as possible to keep bills down for customers,” he said.

Articles You May Like

Chancellor vows to rip up financial red tape – saying post-crash rules went ‘too far’
UK ‘not the target’ of Trump tariffs as free trade deal talks ‘could be back on the cards’
RFK Jr chosen as Donald Trump’s health secretary
Ford’s EV struggles continue as ‘rapidly deteriorating’ market conditions take a toll
Why Jim Cramer is nervous about Best Buy, plus a bright spot in this down market