Pubs closure warning; ‘My energy bill went to £35,000 from £13,000’on August 30, 2022 at 11:43 am

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Six of the country’s largest breweries are warning pubs will have to close without help on energy costs.

Pub landladyImage source, Getty Images

Pubs across the UK will be forced to close due to energy costs soaring by as much as 300%, brewery bosses have said.

Leaders of six of the country’s largest breweries called for “immediate government intervention” on sky-high energy bills this winter.

The landlord of one pub in Essex told the BBC his energy costs had risen from about £13,000 a year to £35,000.

Pub owners said the energy crisis would cause “real and serious irreversible” damage to the industry without support.

The pub and brewery owners from six companies – JW Lees, Carlsberg Marston’s, Admiral Taverns, Drake & Morgan, Greene King and St Austell Brewery – sit on the board of the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA).

In an open letter to the government, they called for urgent intervention, including a support package and a cap on the price of energy for businesses.

Rocketing energy bills come at a time when the number of pubs in England and Wales is falling, hitting the lowest level on record – 39,970 in June, according to analysis.

Simon Cleary, who runs the Plough in Great Chesterford, Essex, said his gas and electricity bills had nearly tripled to £35,000 a year.

It means the pub now needs to generate a further £1,800 in takings per week to cover the costs.

“It really is that bad,” he told the BBC. “I think it’s going to be really tough unless there is intervention from the government.”

Pub landlady

Image source, Getty Images

Chris Jowsey, boss of Admiral Taverns which has 1,600 pubs, said his tenanted pubs now pay more in energy bills than they do in rent.

He told the BBC that one of his tenants wrote to him saying he was leaving after 20 years due to his electricity bill going up 450% – an increase so large he couldn’t pass it on to pub customers.

Mr Jowsey said Admiral was investing in energy-saving equipment for pub cellars and to control fridge-energy use. He also said the company was “looking very closely at a scheme to try and buy energy in bulk and to allow licensees to make use of our own scale”.

But he said: “Even when we went to the energy market in recent months, no-one was initially willing to supply even us, never mind an individual licensee and their pub.

“So we’re trying to do everything we can,” said Mr Jowsey. “But frankly, this is of such a scale that even we can’t support this on our own, we desperately need government intervention to help because actually the market is broken.”

The Department for Business, Energy and Industry said “no government” would be able to control the “global factors pushing up the price of energy and other business costs”.

“But we will continue to support the hospitality sector in navigating the months ahead,” a spokesman added. The government said it was providing a “50% business rates relief for businesses across the UK, freezing alcohol duty rates on beer, cider, wine and spirits and reducing employer national insurance”.

‘Waiting for a PM’

The government has previously said no policy will be announced until the new prime minister is announced on 5 September.

Mr Jowsey said that he had personally raised the issue of high energy prices with ministers more than six months ago.

“I find it incredible that we have to wait for one person to get elected before we actually get some decisions and some policy which will protect not just jobs, not just people’s livelihoods, but also their homes – because remember most people that run pubs in this country actually live above the shop,” he said.

Nick Mackenzie, the boss of Greene King – one of the UK’s largest pub groups with over 3,100 pubs – said the company could face “the prospect of pubs being unable to pay their bills, jobs being lost and beloved locals across the country forced to close their doors”.

He added that would mean all the support given to pubs through the pandemic to stay in businesses “could be wasted”.

Meanwhile, William Lees Jones, of JW Lees, said the government needed to extend the energy cap to business as well as households.

On Friday, the energy regulator Ofgem, which sets the price cap on household bills, said it would rise by 80% in October.

But unlike households, businesses aren’t covered by a regulated energy price cap, meaning bills are even higher.

Aside from bills, breweries also highlighted a possible shortage of carbon dioxide (CO2) which is used in the production of beer.

CF Industries, the UK’s largest CO2 producer, recently announced that it would temporarily stop production at one of its plants because rising energy prices made it too expensive to continue.

Andrew Taylor

Andrew Taylor, managing director of Mr Fox – a bar in Croydon – said that although his electricity and gas bills were growing, cooking oil had trebled in price and food costs were “massively starting to climb”.

He said the business was absorbing a lot of the price hikes but warned eventually he would have to pass on costs to customers.

It is incredibly concerning,” he added.

Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the BBPA, warned the rise in energy bills would cause more damage to the industry than the pandemic did if it didn’t receive support in the next few weeks.

According to Altus, who compiled the report, 400 pubs in England and Wales closed last year and some 200 shut in the first half of 2022 as inflation started to eat in to profits. That brought the total number of pubs down to its lowest since Altus’s records began in 2005.

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