Residents in Birmingham, Bradford and Cornwall will be hit hardest by spiralling energy prices as the crisis threatens to deepen this week, a study has shown.
The areas contain the largest number of “energy crisis hotspots”, where communities are at greatest risk of serious financial hardship as a result of unaffordable energy costs, according to Friends of the Earth.
An analysis by the environmental group identified nearly 9,000 “hotspots” across England and Wales where energy use is high and typical household income is below the national average.
The report found that these neighbourhoods were home to a higher proportion of children than other areas, and that people of colour were also twice as likely to live in them.
Analysis of 30 local authority jurisdictions found Birmingham had the most areas where residents faced significant risk from the surge in energy prices, which has escalated this year following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Energy regulator Ofgem is expected to announced the next industry price cap on Friday. The government is examining ways to cut households energy bills, particularly for vulnerable consumers. Without intervention, annual bills are expected to increase from £1,971 to £3,582 from October. Bills are expected to exceed £4,200 from January and stay high through 2023.
The study found that 65% of Birmingham’s neighbourhoods faced hardship related to energy bills. Households can also suffer higher power costs due to poor insulation and the study found that 59,410 homes in Birmingham needed loft insulation. More than 47,000 did not have cavity wall insulation.
In Bradford, 162 areas were deemed crisis hotspots, with bills there predicted to hit £3,259 this autumn based on current energy usage.
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