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Electricity tariff for households to go up by 5.6%; 4th straight quarter of increase

SP Group says the rise is due to higher fuel costs.
SP Group says the rise is due to higher fuel costs.
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SINGAPORE —The electricity tariff for households will increase by an average of 5.6 per cent for the January to March period next year, compared with the previous quarter, SP Group said on Thursday (Dec 30).

The rise is due to higher fuel costs, it added.

Excluding Goods and Services Tax (GST), the tariff for households will go up from 24.11 cents to 25.44 cents per kWh for the quarter ending Mar 31, 2022.

Including GST, the rate will be 27.22 cents per kWh.

Quarterly household electricity tariff. Graph: SP Group

This increase will mean the average monthly electricity bill for families living in four-room Housing and Development Board flats will increase by S$4.70 before GST, said SP Group.

This is the fourth consecutive quarter of increase, following a decrease in the January to March period this year. 

“Around 95 per cent of Singapore’s electricity is generated using imported natural gas at prices indexed to oil prices,” it said.

"Over the past few months, a confluence of recovering economic activity, severe weather events, and a series of gas production outages have sent global energy market prices significantly higher. These factors have raised electricity prices in many markets."

SP Group reviews the electricity tariffs every quarter based on guidelines set by the Energy Market Authority (EMA).

The electricity tariff consists of four components — energy costs paid to the generation companies, network costs and market support services fees paid to SP Group, as well as market administration and power system operation fees paid to the energy market company and power system operator. 

SP Group said the energy costs component is adjusted quarterly to reflect changes in the cost of fuel and power generation. 

The fuel cost is the cost of imported natural gas, which is tied to oil prices by commercial contracts. 

The cost of power generation mainly covers the costs of operating the power stations, such as the manpower and maintenance costs, as well as the capital cost of the stations, SP Group said. 

City Energy also announced on Thursday that the gas tariff for households will increase by 1.17 cents per kWh to 20.21 cents per kWh, before GST, for the January to March period.

The increase is due to higher fuel and non-fuel costs, compared to the previous quarter, it said.

City Energy reviews the gas tariff based on guidelines set by the EMA. The revised tariffs below have been approved by the authority. CNA

For more stories like this, visit cna.asia

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