Two Bills, One Price: The July Cap and the New Politics of Where Costs Live

The July price cap rise is being reported as a 13% increase, to a headline of £1,663. Both numbers are accurate and neither tells the story. Beneath the quarterly reset, government has begun editing where energy costs appear rather than what they are - and the non-domestic market sits on the wrong side of the edit.

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Nothing to See Here: NESO and the Economics of an Information Monopoly

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Paying Twice: The Anatomy of Britain's £1.4bn Curtailment Bill