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Dave Cash
@gazmanlon
·
Sep 18
French are at it in the channel..
RNLI are meeting a French SAR right now 4miles inside British waters Seeker has already collected from the French 2miles inside British Waters
Time to STOP BF and RNLI from putting to sea unless it's an Emergency which these are NOT
This energy crisis is fun, isn’t it? Capitalism at its best. The privatised and fragmented retail energy business close to collapse as smaller providers go bust buying expensive wholesale gas, and the taxpayer doubtless to step in to bribe, sorry ‘loan’ cash to the bigger providers to take over all the customer accounts left at risk. Then pass on the price rises to us.
Meanwhile food supplies threatened by a lack of the carbon dioxide needed for virtually all elements of the food processing system, from stunning animals before they are killed to packaging. The shortage is caused by US owned CF Industries stopping production at its two fertilster plants in the U.K., and apparently making fertiliser also provides 60% of the UKs carbon dioxide needs. They are closed because wholesale gas prices are so high that it’s not profitable to continue production.
Thankfully we have the most economically left wing government since the seventies as far as industry is concerned (it and it’s followers are in denial about this of course) despite its ‘conservative’ badge, and populism demands that they will somehow pay their way through this. But it’s not a policy, it’s a staggering from one expensive crisis to the next, loading the future with debt.
Johnson ‘this will get better as the market sorts itself out’. He’s a cretin. We have had little wind energy because of the weather, fires removing supplies of energy from Europe, maintenance reducing our own gas production, issues at nuclear plants, reopening coal fired stations… and gas prices now 5 times higher than last year, going up more than anywhere else. Central planning please.
The certainty - those least able to pay more will be given no choice.
These 70 firms don’t actually generate or provide any of the infrastructure for energy supply. They simply buy energy (from the same sources) and contribute to the various companies providing the infrastructure, and sell power under a variety of packages. Price differences result from their competitive attempts to capture customers and cost differences in their back office and billing systems. They add absolutely no value but obviously put up prices so they can make a profit. Simply middle men in the supply chain, competing for those customers who shop around for the best prices. The best prices seem to have been provided by the small, weak, traders and now the big ones, the ten that will be left, are reluctant to pick up these customers on good, cheap, non profitable deals. So the government ie the taxpayer, will have to bribe them to do it.There were 70 energy 'suppliers' (they should more accurately be called retailers, I would say) in the UK at the start of this year and there are expected to be as few as ten by the end of the year with so many going bust. Why not re-nationalise the whole thing and go back to just one? Central planning indeed.
These 70 firms don’t actually generate or provide any of the infrastructure for energy supply. They simply buy energy (from the same sources) and contribute to the various companies providing the infrastructure, and sell power under a variety of packages. Price differences result from their competitive attempts to capture customers and cost differences in their back office and billing systems. They add absolutely no value but obviously put up prices so they can make a profit. Simply middle men in the supply chain, competing for those customers who shop around for the best prices. The best prices seem to have been provided by the small, weak, traders and now the big ones, the ten that will be left, are reluctant to pick up these customers on good, cheap, non profitable deals. So the government ie the taxpayer, will have to bribe them to do it.
I find the structure of the U.K. energy market completely bewildering.
Blimey, i turn my back for one minute and theres a riveting debate about metric measurements. ****in hell does anyone truly care either way? I mean really care? Did it upset people so much, does it upset people now its apparantly changing back? People will still shop where they shop, will still use the same traders etc. Traders will still sell to the same people. All a bit ****in pointless really, but i suppose it truly comes down to someone forcing us to do something over someone else forcing us to do something. Im off to eat a chicken kebab and watch Newcastle v Leeds. Got an early appointment for some bamboo tattoo tomorrow.
Temperature could have mentioned the British practice of using Fahrenheit when it's hot, Centigrade when it's coldYou must log in or register to see images
There were 70 energy 'suppliers' (they should more accurately be called retailers, I would say) in the UK at the start of this year and there are expected to be as few as ten by the end of the year with so many going bust. Why not re-nationalise the whole thing and go back to just one? Central planning indeed.
Temperature could have mentioned the British practice of using Fahrenheit when it's hot, Centigrade when it's cold
I've never come across that! Always centigrade for me for weather.
I have fallen into the bad habit of using farengeit when BBQing as a lot of the recipies I use are American.
Liz Truss engaged in a very important phone call holding the phone upside down.
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maybe shes talking to australiaDepends who she's talking to. Could be the political equivalent of Nelson putting the telescope to his eyepatch
Is there any point? No matter how guilty he is nothing will happen.
https://m.huffingtonpost.co.uk/amp/...ey-liV4laMYmen5u7cvGZ49PSqHUQgPrafHoM4a7A_BEo