A Liz Truss-created emergency program for energy dealers that was secretly ended earlier this year cost the Treasury approximately 500,000 pounds, Entrepreneurng report.
The Treasury and the Bank of England created the energy markets financing scheme (EMFS) as a £40 billion government-guaranteed backstop fund to maintain stability in the energy and financial markets.
The program was shut down in January after pressure on energy companies decreased as a result of a large decline in wholesale gas prices earlier in the year. The program was intended to provide energy traders with liquidity to deal with significant margin calls—demands from brokers to deposit additional cash or securities to cover potential losses.
The Treasury stated that it spent £465,000 on “external technical consultants to support the creation of the EMFs” in response to a freedom of information request from the report.
It stated that 20 energy companies and 11 commercial banks had been invited to technical video calls with the Treasury over the plan. However, no applications were submitted during a timeframe from late October to early January, when energy companies would have applied along with a bank.
The international management consulting firm FTI Consulting received £400,000 for its advising services, and the legal firm Hogan Lovells received £65,000 each.
According to an investigation by the data firm Tussell, FTI’s market research and consulting services under the government contract were originally valued at up to £4.9 million.
In September, Truss unveiled the plan as one of several steps to stop the energy situation from worsening over the winter. Support for households and businesses was also announced by the then-prime minister; both of these programs were eventually scaled back to cut costs.
The initiative was implemented as one of several emergency steps to boost the energy sector, according to the Treasury.
“Prices in the wholesale gas markets have significantly decreased since the scheme’s launch, which has lessened some of the pressure facing eligible energy firms,”
Energy companies were able to obtain the necessary lines of credit from commercial lenders without the need for a government-backed guarantee since market conditions had improved since the scheme’s launch.
“The EMFS was designed to supplement current commercial financing where this alone was insufficient. Penal pricing and restrictions upon drawing were set so it would only be used if commercial and competitively priced funding was unavailable on the market. It wasn’t meant to take the role of commercial lending.”
The Bank of England would not disclose how much money it invested in the development of the EMFs.
Industry insiders claimed that the prohibition on CEO incentives and dividend payments after adopting the plan had also deterred energy companies.
As homes and companies struggle to pay for the high bills inflated by the high gas prices due to the situation in Ukraine, the government’s spending on energy support programs has come under examination.
Jeremy Hunt reversed course on a proposal to cut back on the generosity of home help in his budget, but he kept the decrease in financial energy aid for businesses that went into effect on April 1.
In conclusion, business associations have dubbed the support for businesses “scattergun” and warned that many are now considering closing due to prohibitive fees.
Source: The Guardian