- Original Poster
- #1
Hi all,
I thought I would create this post as help for those who find energy procurement a minefield (it can be if you’re given the wrong advice) and to allay some fears (mainly media driven) about energy prices doubling.
If your renewal is up this year according to the media your bills will double. This is simply not true, when purchasing energy, you don’t look at the price now, you also look at future pricing.
On what we (in the industry) call forward price curves, you wholesale energy prices is made up of an average forward price of the contract.
So if your electricity contract starts today. And the current wholesale price is £200 per MW. You don’t pay £200 per MW for the life of the contract. For a fixed contract you pay the average of the current price. The winter 2026 price, the summer 2027 price and the winter 2027 price (based on a 24 month contract).
Using the £200 example. Let’s make the following assumptions.
Prices.
Current - £200 (we’re almost in Summer 26)
Winter 26 - £100
Summer 27 - £100
Winter 27 - £100
Your wholesale energy prices for a new contract would be £125 (£500 divided by the 4 seasons).
Get a 3 year contract and you’ll be paying less.
Therefore, if your energy contracts are up soon. There’s no need to panic about prices doubling. You just need to look at your procurement strategy.
I’d be happy to answer any questions on this or anything energy related. Either on here or you can email me.
I thought I would create this post as help for those who find energy procurement a minefield (it can be if you’re given the wrong advice) and to allay some fears (mainly media driven) about energy prices doubling.
If your renewal is up this year according to the media your bills will double. This is simply not true, when purchasing energy, you don’t look at the price now, you also look at future pricing.
On what we (in the industry) call forward price curves, you wholesale energy prices is made up of an average forward price of the contract.
So if your electricity contract starts today. And the current wholesale price is £200 per MW. You don’t pay £200 per MW for the life of the contract. For a fixed contract you pay the average of the current price. The winter 2026 price, the summer 2027 price and the winter 2027 price (based on a 24 month contract).
Using the £200 example. Let’s make the following assumptions.
Prices.
Current - £200 (we’re almost in Summer 26)
Winter 26 - £100
Summer 27 - £100
Winter 27 - £100
Your wholesale energy prices for a new contract would be £125 (£500 divided by the 4 seasons).
Get a 3 year contract and you’ll be paying less.
Therefore, if your energy contracts are up soon. There’s no need to panic about prices doubling. You just need to look at your procurement strategy.
I’d be happy to answer any questions on this or anything energy related. Either on here or you can email me.
