Yves here. This post uses struggling South Wales families to illustrate the difficulties many in the UK and the EU will face as already painfully high energy prices are set to get even worse at the retail level. Some may be able to use fuel like wood, coal, or peat to fight cold…but that’s no solution for lights and household equipment. A big increase in fires as the main source of residential heat means more homes burning down and more carbon monoxide poisoning.
It’s infuriating to see so much distress, and know the pain is set to become more severe and widespread…..due substantially to politicians not admitting their Russia sanctions have massively backfired and are doing more harm at home than to their target.
By Seb Cook, a journalist in south Wales and editor of voice.wales. Originally published at openDemocracy
“We used to put £20 a week in and now it’s more like 50,” says Steve, discussing his family’s pre-paid electric meter. “That’s how bad it’s got, so we just knocked everything off. There’s nights where we just sit there in the dark.”
Steve and I had a long conversation about fuel poverty, but it is this image of him, his partner, daughter and granddaughter – three generations of one family – sitting at home with all the lights off that sticks with me.
Gas usage is even more rationed in Steve’s home, in the forgotten outskirts of Cardiff. Last winter, there were only three weeks where the family put the radiators on.
“We all stay in one room… so we just stay warm that way,” he explains. “With all the prices going up, people can’t afford to heat their homes, can’t afford to cook.”
But if the previous winter was bad, Steve says the coming one will be far worse. “There’ll be a lot of people struggling, especially the old and people with very young kids.”
A week after we met, Steve’s worst fears appeared to be confirmed. Martin Lewis, the founder of the Money Saving Expert financial website, warned that household energy costs could increase by a further 64% in October, with the energy price cap having already risen by 54% in April.
The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has predicted that households on the lowest incomes will be forced to spend 26% of their budget after housing costs on gas and electricity in 2023/24, compared to just 12% two years previously.
Talking to Steve, it’s clear that the effects of these price hikes are already intolerable.
Steve, a warm, friendly man in his late 40s, who helps those around him feel at ease through jokes, grew up near Bridgend in the shadow of the miners’ strike and has lived in south Wales for the majority of his adult life. We meet at the Beacon Centre, in the small community of Trowbridge, St Mellons, about halfway between Cardiff and Newport.
As we chat, Steve is leaning over a counter, serving teas, coffees and cakes to locals. He and his partner Vanessa volunteer at the centre once a week as part of a food scheme called The Pantry. For up to £5 a week, people can come on a Tuesday to choose around £30 worth of food staples – in addition to plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables – and have free hot drinks and cake. Unlike at most food banks, you don’t have to prove your poverty to become a member.
Steve, who gave up a career in computer gaming to become Vanessa’s full-time carer, says helping out in this way lifts him out of what he describes as depression caused by living in poverty. But it means he’s now witness to the full scale of the crisis.
“We got a lot more people coming in,” he says. “With everything going up in price, they can’t afford to live. None of us can. But the system’s getting worse and worse… and it doesn’t look like the government’s helping anyone.”
I sit down with Helen Griffiths, a coordinator of The Pantry, who echoes the grim picture painted by Steve. Helen works for Hope St Mellons, an independent charity that not only helps run The Pantry but also administers a grant scheme – the St Mellons Mutual Aid Fund – for local people who need urgent financial help.
Some 95% of those who get in touch with the aid fund do so because of fuel and food poverty, Helen tells me. ‘Running out of gas’ is the main reason cited for needing help.
In the two years up to March 2022, the fund issued 318 payments to people across St Mellons, with the ward of Trowbridge, which is among the top 10% of deprived areas in Wales, receiving more than any other.
In October last year, when Universal Credit was cut, the average number of monthly applications to the St Mellons Mutual Aid Fund almost doubled, from 11 to 19.
I would like to speculate that the powers that be, those that created these idiotic sanctions that do nothing but hurt the poor in their own countries, will never suffer in the cold.
Hopefully because they will burn in hell.
As a Brit this is absolutely disgusting. While the UK government basks in corruption and greed it does nothing to help the poor.
I too find this absolutely disgusting, heart breaking. I read an article on the same subject in the Guardian a month or so ago. Fuel poverty in Liverpool. And thinking back, before the current crisis, reading an article about poverty in, I think it was Blackpool. It was shake my head time.
It’s USA, too– been there, lived it, as have/do others on this board. No doubt poverty takes a toll in long-term health and overall well-being, aside from being an overall embittering experience. Any notion that there is something noble in being poor or that poverty builds character can only be chacterized as vomit regurgitated by the ruling class that is lapped-up and excreted as frothy shite by their brainless adulators, enforcers, and enablers.
Poverty is a roach motel, and only a lucky few escape, at least here in the West. I’ll note that China eliminated absolute poverty in 2020:
How Does China Eliminate Poverty?
Ouyang Yujing, Ambassador of China to Malaysia
How does China eliminate poverty? This is one of the many questions that Malaysian friends from all walks of life often ask me ever since I assumed office as ambassador.
In February this year, Chinese President Xi Jinping solemnly declared that, on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party of China (CPC), through joint efforts from the whole nation, China completed the arduous task of eliminating extreme poverty. China has created another miracle that shall go down in history. Many countries have since expressed their desire to learn from China’s successful experience. Recently, China released a white paper titled “Poverty Alleviation: China’s Experience and Contribution” to share its great journey and experience in poverty alleviation.
http://my.china-embassy.gov.cn/eng/sgxw/202105/t20210503_8921080.htm
When it comes to better serving the people, I’d say that the communists are well ahead of any other political party that I have seen in my lifetime.
China eliminated poverty? And now they are maintaining Zero Covid? ‘Sina Delenda Est!’
Absolute poverty…
Having spent a week in winter-time in Brecon which is in South Wales, I can testify as to how cold a room can get and how you can see your own breath on the air as you lay in bed. You would hope that the UK government would do something to help poorer people out during the coming winter. You would hope so. My expectation, however, is that the UK government will get alarmed by the amount of smoke being emitted as people try to stay warm and to cook hot food which will cause them to put in a ban on all smoke-emitted heating devices which means wood, coal, oil or whatever. So I have a prediction. In a lot of countries in the coming winter if you drive your car around local neighbourhoods, it will be noticeable how many houses will be unlit inside except for perhaps the glare of a TV. More so if governments start to shut down street lights. Not saying that we will get like North Korea however-
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Korean_Peninsula_at_night_from_space.jpg
Keeping the cold away could be accomplished with big, thick duves filled with geese dawn. At least that has been done for hundreds of years in Central Europe. My grandma used to have 20 geese that were plucked twice every year and the dawn served to fill her pillows and duves as well as her three daughters. And it was sweltering during winter…
One of the most fond memories from my childhood is when my family stayed for Christmas in a non-electrified cottage that belonged to our relative (she lived decades abroad, so the rest of us kept it somewhat inhabited).
I still remember that almost unbearable coldness when changing onto your jammies, then sliding under the duvet – which was even colder – and then letting your own body heat to warm it into the best place in the world. And finally falling asleep while watching the dancing shadows cast by an oil lamp at the other end of the room.
Still brings a smile on my face.
In the past 24 hours USA Senators appear to be coming to an agreement on promoting domestic CHIP production b/c of the need to defend against “dependence on power rivals” to paraphrase Chuck Schumer. Whereas the dependence has been known for at least 18 years (that many USA military weapons are built with chips made in China), this is the first I’ve heard that elites want to re-grow a cast aside domestic industry.
I guess we frame arguments for domestic policy and social services the wrong way, with hard-luck stories. Policy does not get passed for the economic well being of domestic populations; it gets passed for global dominence / power balance reasons; that’s what the senator as much as said.
Let them eat CHIPS!
This will be a dark winter of discontents. I am trying to get my niece, a German/ US dual citizen, to come over to the States to visit this winter and couch surf.
She really doesn’t like the US and its politics, but we might be a slightly safer haven for a few months.
eff’n 2022 and this is all the ‘further’ we have gotten as a species? What ‘society’? No wonder Musk and Bezos want to leave….
And yet here we are with Eden at our fingertips, and we refuse to grow up and share it with intelligence, love and compassion- for all species, with all the wisdom and tech we have developed over the millennia…
Lordy lordy
“…that the governments for the last 40 years have dumped on us.” (emphasis added)
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How many times have I read this phrase? What happened in the States back then? The Ronald Reagan FRightwingnut Cabal was elected and consolidated power. The rest is history. And that history I could tear my hair out over!
Reagan and his “Trickle down economy”, that later, endearingly renamed to “Tinkle down economy” is still going strong. Ain’t broken, don’t fix it…
I think a government that can blow 37BN on an entirely useless test and trace programme, can find the money to subsidise energy bills in such an emergency.
There is a distinct block between ‘can’ and ‘will’; labelled ‘want to’.
Do not let this happen here. Electric and gas “smart meters” and now “smart water meters,” which our local water utility is about to blow 50 million dollars of our rate payer money on, allow “efficiency,” meaning firing meter readers, and people “checking via smart phone apps for leaks.” Never mentioned is their ability to remotely shut off your utilities for non-payment of bills.
This in turn could allow daily “competitive” pricing of utilities, i.e. the billionaires a few miles away can outbid your family for the price of electricity, or water, in times of emergency, with higher prices to punish Putin or some such horseshit, or during programmed outages which we have already experienced many times in California, thanks to Newsom’s picks placed on the Public Utilities Commission and their lack of regulating Pacific Gas and Electric, which puts profits over people’s lives and is already a corporate felon.
The technology already exists.
In other words, unless you were to allow your credit card on to be on file, or give permission via your smart phone tied to the credit card, no power, gas or water for you that day, unless you agree to pay a competitive bid price.
All that needs to happen is for a new generation to acquiesce to and accept this. Outlandish? Can never happen here?
Rudimentary examination of our “health care” system and its abuses is illustrative of what can and has happened here.
The piece mentions pre-pay meters. Unlike the old days when you could put a shilling in your meter when it ran out now they have a plastic key. When your credit runs out and your electricity gets cut off (without warning if memory serves) you have to take the key to a shop—which may or may not be local, and may or may not be open—to recharge it. On top of this abuse the electricity purchased thus costs considerably more than by monthly bill.
This is beyond cruel and barbaric that a govt. would treat its people like this. It is astonishing to see Europe self destruct because bad man Putin. Millions will suffer and die because of this insanity. Never in my lifetime did I ever think that Europe would go back to the Dark Ages. For those who foist this cruelty on people I hope they end up in the worst place in hell.
The situation is like how it was in a small village in southern India during the 80’s and 90’s. Even then the issue there was a supply problem, not an affordability problem. This impacted most sections of society(the super rich still had generators) equally and most folks had skin in the game to bring about change.
Capitalism, free trade, just in time strategies are great at turning supply problems into affordability problems … because … Free Market!!! This unfortunately hits the most vulnerable sections of society the most, which coincidentally also have the least power to influence change in the discourse and consequently in policy.
I am not proud to say that I do have a bit of schadenfreude to see a western nation shoot itself in the foot while a former colony is able to get a deal on the energy resources.