Extended Expert View: Contract Tenure in the UK B2B Energy Market
Report
With competition for business energy customers increasingly fierce, UK suppliers are keen to tie their clients into longer contracts. Some of them, such as Centrica and RWE npower, have been reasonably successful in that.
With competition for business energy customers increasingly fierce, UK suppliers are keen to tie their clients into longer contracts. Some of them, such as Centrica and RWE npower, have been reasonably successful in that. Overall, however, suppliers are not having much luck with extending contract tenure, with the average electricity contract getting three months shorter between 2004-05.
Scope of this report
The brief focuses on the B2B (non-residential) segment of the UK electricity and gas supply markets.
Featured in the brief are RWE npower, Centrica, British Energy, SSE, Scottish Power, GDF, E.ON Energy, EDF Energy, Total and Shell Gas Direct.
Research and analysis highlights
Despite UK suppliers' efforts in offering longer-term contracts to their business clients, over the last 12 months the average contract tenure has declined by 3 months in electricity and remained static in gas. One possible reason for that is that users are plumping for a shorter contract in expectation of better terms the next time.
Centrica and RWE npower lead the way in longer contracts. By contrast, GDF, Centrica, E.ON Energy and Shell Gas Direct are below the industry average.
Key reasons to read this report
Analysis in the brief is based on the newest research from Datamonitor's 2005 UK B2B Energy Buyer survey.
The brief also identifies and explains the main changes in customer attitudes vis-a-vis contract tenure over the last 12 months.