First of all the word rich in the title here is misleading and that isn’t even what the Telegraph says. It says: Middle class could face higher energy bills than poor to fund net zero.
Ofgen is considering ways to reform the standing charge.
This from the Guardian which doesn’t hide behind a paywall:
www.theguardian.com/money/2025/apr/15/increased-bills-for-higher-earners-could-fund-uk-energy-upgrade-ofgem-says
The energy regulator, Ofgem, is expected to consult the industry on the proposals as part of a root-and-branch review into how the costs of upgrading Britain’s energy networks can be recovered through home energy bills in a way that is fairer.
Jonathan Brearley, the chief executive of Ofgem, told an industry briefing the “wide-ranging examination” of how to allocate the energy industry’s costs would “raise the question of whether there is a more progressive way to pay”.
He told reporters this would include investigating whether there were ways to attach the final cost that households pay to their household income.
“It’s a question that we need to answer as we go through this transition and as we think hard about getting to a place we want to get to,” he said.
Under the current system, the cost of maintaining the wires and cables that deliver the gas and electricity to homes and businesses is recouped through standing charges on home energy bills. These fixed daily charges, which also include the cost of fitting smart meters and other policy costs, are applied to energy bills whether you use any energy or not.
This means cash-strapped households who are unable to heat their homes still bear the full brunt of covering energy network costs. Vulnerable consumers who are often high users of energy – for medical or health needs – also end up paying above the odds to maintain the grid.
I would have no issue with profligate users of energy paying more, the household equivalent of driving a big gas-guzzling car. Administering is wouldn’t be costly at all if there was a graduated scale of use ... the first x kWh charged at one rate, the next y kWh charged at the next and so on.
If we can make more of an effort to control what we use so that we are not subjected to marginal wholesale pricing, then costs would come down for everyone.