Liverpool council could pay extra £4.5m after energy errors

  • Published
Liverpool Three graces
Image caption,

Liverpool City Council apologised for its "failures"

Liverpool City Council may have to pay an extra £4.5m after it admitted "errors" over its power supply.

The council's cabinet was not informed that its electricity and gas supplier Scottish Power had stopped supplying commercial customers, a report said, external.

It means the council's electricity cost - for operational sites and street lighting - may rise from £8.5m to £13m.

However, the total energy cost, which includes schools and the fire service, will go up from £10.6m to £26m.

Schools and Merseyside Fire and Rescue Service pay from their own publicly-funded budgets outside of the council's general fund.

'Decision errors'

The council's chief executive Tony Reeves apologised for "control failures and errors in the decision-making process which meant the cabinet was not fully aware of this".

Liverpool Mayor Joanne Anderson described it as a "kick in the teeth, external", adding that: "I won't defend something that is a clear failure on the council's part."

The council said an independent audit would be conducted as it searched for a new energy supplier.

Richard Kemp, leader of Liverpool Liberal Democrats, said there would be "devastating consequences" for under-pressure frontline services and schools.

He said the council "lacks a professional procurement department led by skilled negotiators and with legal back-up, who can build well-constructed agreements and deals into a cohesive contract".

In April, Everton FC were asked to pay about £350,000 to the council over the latter's failed funding plan for the club's new ground.

It followed an "outstanding dispute" since the council spent £700,000 on fees preparing to offer a loan, although the club secured funding elsewhere.

In 2021, the government appointed commissioners to oversee parts of the council after Parliament inspectors found a "serious breakdown of governance" and "multiple apparent failures".

Presentational grey line

Why not follow BBC North West on Facebook, external, Twitter, external and Instagram, external? You can also send story ideas to northwest.newsonline@bbc.co.uk

Related internet links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.