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Phil Norris & Mike Kelly

When the new energy price cap will be announced this week - and it'll be grim

It's the news every household in Britain is dreading and it comes this week. The level of the new energy price cap is to be announced and come into effect on October 1.

The energy regulator, Ofgem, is set to announce the rise this coming Friday. It is expected to soar to around £3,600 for the average household - a massive increase on the current £1,971 the average household is paying at present, reports WalesOnline.

Worse is to follow as further rises will be announced for January 1 and for April 1. And the latest forecast suggest annual bills could rise to a shocking £6,000 per year for the average household.

READ MORE: 50 ways to save money on your energy bills ahead of price cap rise this October

The energy price cap, set by Ofgem, only limits the profits that energy suppliers can take and does not protect customers from runaway wholesale energy prices. Research by the Office for National Statistics found that 45% of adults who pay energy bills found it very or somewhat difficult to do so in the first half of August.

So we can only imagine what that figure will be when the increases hit more than 20 million households in the UK. The winter will prove difficult for everyone with an energy bill to pay with those on the lowest incomes are set to be the most impacted.

A Government spokesman said: "We know that rising prices are affecting how far people’s incomes go, which is why we have taken action to help households with £37 billion worth of support, which includes targeted support to help people through the difficult winter ahead.

"Eight million of the most vulnerable households will see £1,200 extra support, provided in instalments across the year, and everyone will receive £400 over the winter to help with energy bills.

“That’s on top of action earlier this year, including a record fuel duty cut and a National Insurance cut worth up to £330 a year for the typical employee.

"We are also working closely with the NHS at pace to ensure we are ready for the pressures ahead by increasing capacity, boosting NHS 111 and 999 support, tackling delayed discharge and using new innovations such as virtual wards."

Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said: "NHS leaders are absolutely right to raise concerns about the impact on health. The Vaccines Minister has admitted that elderly people unable to heat their homes this winter will be at greater risk of flu and other illnesses."

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