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    Octopus Energy to slow German expansion

Summary

Britain's Octopus Germany, a relatively new market entrant for retail electricity and gas, has delayed its target of one million German customers by one year to the end of 2025 after wholesale price surges caused a two-month stop last year.

by: Reuters

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Complimentary, NGW News Alert, Natural Gas & LNG News, Europe, Top Stories, News By Country, Germany, United Kingdom

Octopus Energy to slow German expansion

FRANKFURT/DUESSELDORF, Jan 10 (Reuters) - Britain's Octopus Germany, a relatively new market entrant for retail electricity and gas, has delayed its target of one million German customers by one year to the end of 2025 after wholesale price surges caused a two-month stop last year.

"We needed to pause our expansion for a while," said German Chief Executive Andrew Mack in an interview.

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"Our ambition is still to reach a million retail customers within the next three years," he added.

In Britain, the company's low overhead model has allowed it to make large inroads in the marketplace quickly and in late December, it received a further push by closing a takeover of collapsed rival Bulb under a 4.5 billion pound ($5.47 billion) provision linked to a government loan that is, however, repayable.

"I don't see anything that will disrupt the acquisition," said Mack.

Recent falls in wholesale energy prices will be helpful for suppliers like Octopus because less money is needed to buy wholesale volumes, and for customers, as pressure from sky-high prices is easing, he said.

"Right now, energy is looking much more affordable than it was even a month ago," he said.

"We are able to pass on those price falls to consumers very quickly," he said, adding assessments were made weekly.

Dutch gas prices for delivery in a month last month halved to 70 euros per megawatt hour, although remaining at over three times their pre-2021 levels.

The drastic curtailment of supplies from Russia following its invasion of Ukraine sent prices spiralling up in 2022 but European countries have now replenished gas stocks and the current winter is mild.

Moving to Germany-specific goals, Mack said Octopus was backing its retail business with onshore wind assets, bought by Octopus Energy Generation, in line with the group's environmental strategy.

Octopus believed that electric heat pumps to replace oil and gas heating boilers in German households were the most suitable add-on service to household energy contracts.

Currently, such pumps heat only 2.7% of German homes while gas accounts for 49.3% and oil for 24.7%. ($1 = 0.8222 pounds) (Reporting by Vera Eckert and Tom Kaeckenhoff, editing by Rachel More and David Evans)