Vinnie_cork
Registered User
- Messages
- 122
Just switched.
....My worry is whether the regulator has sorted a procedure for moving from Bord Gais to Airtricity or will you first of all have to move back to ESB then to Airtricity...
Have no worries. It will be perfectly permissable to move from Bord Gais to Airtricity without having to go back to ESB. Hell, you can even run up a debt with Bord Gais and move just when they are about to disconnect you and the debt can't folllow you to your new supplier. Them's the market rules!
Regards,
Fnergg
Now, if only someone could enter the market to compete with my ridiculously high Bord Gáis heating bill...
How in the name of God could you cook the turkey with the little bit of gas fizzling through the wiresWonder will the ESB compete and supply gas? That would be funny.
Thanks for the reply.
By the way; what exactly do you do in the ESB? I need a new socket put in
...Any discount on ESB is welcome, as a monopoly they have been ripping us off for years
By the way folks, if you are switching to Bord Gais make sure you pay your bills by the due date. Otherwise you will incur interest charges on the debt. See their Terms and Conditions and in particular:
(f) If you do not pay us any sum due under the Contract you will be liable to pay us interest from the due date for payment at a daily rate equal to 2% above the Bank of Ireland AAA Overdraft Rate then in force or, if there is no such rate, then an equivalent rate, accruing on a daily basis until payment is made.
The ESB levies no such charge.
Always read the small print!
Hi Banana. So who do you blame? Essentially, if new players are introduced that produces competition. If something is not "real competition" then it is "unreal competition". Can you explain the latter please.The interesting thing is that when ESB was a total monopoly (prior to 2001) Irish electricity prices were the cheapest in Europe.
If that is real competition, I'm a banana.
Regards,
Fnergg
6. ESB are therefore making a profit of 30% on their selling price which is set by the regulator.
a) Is this not scandalous that the regulator would facilitate these profits for the ESB?
b) Will the regulator not be tasked with setting the price that Bord Gais charges for the electricity and, if so, how can BG give a guarantee of always being lower than the ESB?
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