âBreathing in cold air will kill my husband
âBreathing in cold air will kill my husband â but we canât afford heating oilâ
Gail Thompson has said she is deeply concerned about the hikes in the price of heating oil, which could make it hard for her husband to breathe in their Kent home
A woman whose husband is unable to breathe in cold air has said she is worried they cannot heat their home following huge price hikes for heating oil due to the US war against Iran.
Gail Thompson, 66, and her husband Steve, 71, live in rural Kent, and paid ÂŁ328 for their last delivery of 500 litres of heating oil in January. On Thursday, they were quoted ÂŁ717 for the same delivery following huge spikes in costs following the escalation of the conflict in the Middle East.
Ms Thompson told The Independent her husbandâs chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and pulmonary fibrosis (PF) make breathing in cold air incredibly difficult, and could kill him if they are left without heating.
The couple have around 380 litres of heating oil left â enough to last a month, or several, depending on the temperature â and are trying to turn the heating on as little as possible to conserve their supply. But Ms Thompson said her husbandâs illnesses mean that sometimes they have no choice but to turn it on.
âThe other day our thermostat said 14C,â she said. âWhen it gets that cold we have to put the heating on, or it will kill him. There is nothing you can do to warm up the air other than put the heating on. So we put it on, we had to.â
Ms Thompson told The Independent their biggest concern is that prices will âkeep increasingâ with no end to the conflict in sight. She added there are many elderly people in her area who she is concerned will also be struggling with health issues in the cold.
âMy concern is the prices are going through the roof, but also, if they canât get any oil, what happens then?,â she asked. âWhat happens if the suppliers run so low that people canât get it?â
Ms Thompson said while the couple donât struggle for money day to day, they budget, and cannot afford the huge jump in prices heating oil has seen over the last week.
âWeâre not struggling for money as a general rule, but weâre not millionaires,â she told The Independent. âIt does make you think twice about buying oil.
âI canât afford to pay ÂŁ700, I just canât.â
Unlike electricity and gas, heating oil is not subject to any regulation or price cap by Ofgem, meaning suppliers are free to price it as high as they wish.
Ms Thompson accused heating oil suppliers of âprofiteeringâ, saying people will eventually pay the high prices because they have to for hot water, even without heating their homes.
âItâs unfair,â she said. âThat sounds like a peevish word, but it doesnât seem right that electricity and gas prices can be capped but those delivering the oil can price gouge willy nilly.â
Thieves have reportedly targeted heating oil tanks in Suffolk as prices soar. Police have urged those with heating oil tanks to take steps to keep them safe following reports at two properties.
The government has said it will ânot tolerateâ energy companies exploiting the Middle East crisis for profit, with Sir Keir Starmer pledging to âsend the strong message to companies that prices must be fair, transparent and justifiable, not inflated at the expense of working peopleâ.
Britain's competition watchdog, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), has also launched an investigation into âtroubling reportsâ of sudden price hikes for heating oil. It said it was writing to heating oil suppliers and intermediaries âas a matter of urgencyâ to gather evidence and consider whether the behaviour breaches consumer protection laws â which could result in enforcement action.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves said the government was working with the watchdog to tackle âany price gougingâ in heating oil.
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