Energy Supplier Crisis Looms as Ofgem’s Financial Rules Fail
Centrica chief Chris O’Shea’s warning about imminent energy supplier collapses has proven accurate, with Tomato Energy failing just days after his prediction. Industry experts believe this marks only the beginning of a new wave of energy company failures.
Key Takeaways
- Multiple energy suppliers failing financial resilience tests
- Ofgem keeping troubled companies’ identities secret
- Households ultimately bear costs through higher bills
- Recovery plan loophole allows capital-deficient firms to continue operating
Ovo Energy Under Scrutiny
Ovo Energy faces serious financial challenges, with auditors flagging “material uncertainty” about its ability to continue operations. The company’s CEO and finance chief resigned recently as it negotiates a capital recovery plan with Ofgem.
Despite these red flags, the regulator has maintained public silence, leaving customers unaware of their supplier’s precarious position unless they dig through complex financial filings.
Consumers Bear the Burden
When suppliers collapse, Ofgem protects customer credit balances by transferring accounts to other providers. However, these rescue operations aren’t free – the costs ultimately appear on all household energy bills through industry levies.
Regulatory Loopholes Exposed
The most concerning aspect of Ofgem’s approach is that companies aren’t considered in breach of capital rules if they simply have a “recovery plan” in place. This allows financially unstable firms to continue taking new customers and using customer credit balances as working capital.
Ofgem refuses to disclose which suppliers fail its financial benchmarks, the scale of their capital shortfalls, or the credibility of their recovery plans. This secrecy undermines consumer confidence and protects underperforming companies at households’ expense.
Chris O’Shea had repeatedly warned Ofgem before the previous wave of collapses, and history appears to be repeating. The regulator’s preference for secrecy over transparency raises serious questions about its commitment to consumer protection.




