Single mother forced to move due to high electricity bills

High electricity prices in Sweden are forcing single mother Angelica Hjelm, 31, to move from her villa in Bräcke, Jämtland. Her January bill reached 8,000 kronor, and February looks set to be even more expensive. Energy economist Claes Hemberg describes the situation as a crisis on the electricity market.

Angelica Hjelm, 31, lives in a villa in Bräcke, Jämtland, with her two children. With rising electricity prices, she sees no alternative but to move to an apartment. When speaking to Expressen, she described her January bill of 8,000 kronor and expressed concern about the next one.

"It’s clear that one thinks about it and hopes the next won’t be as awful. But it will probably land there too. I don’t really know what to expect," she says.

She cannot reduce heating without risking frozen pipes, making the situation unsustainable during winter. "The plan is to move to an apartment, that’s what I’m going to do. We’re looking now. It feels tough. It does, but winters like this just don’t work," she adds.

Bräcke is in electricity area 2, where the average price in January was 88 öre per kilowatt-hour. In February, it has increased by about 24 percent to 109 öre per kilowatt-hour. Nationally, the average has risen by 19 percent.

Claes Hemberg, energy economist at Nibe, warns of continued high prices. Tomorrow, prices are expected to exceed 5 kronor per kilowatt-hour in three of four electricity areas, driven by cold weather, low hydropower, little wind, and high exports to Finland. "It’s a crisis on the electricity market. It’s about thousands of extra kronor that people have to pay that they’re not prepared for," he says.

Hemberg recommends using electricity during low-price hours to save up to 30–50 percent and urges authorities to demand more support from electricity companies, such as automatic solutions for consumers.

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Illustration of power outages and repair efforts in snowy northern Sweden after Storm Johannes, with regulator criticism highlighted.
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Regulator criticizes power companies over prolonged Storm Johannes outages

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Days after Storm Johannes battered northern Sweden, thousands of households remain without power, violating electricity laws limiting unplanned outages to 24 hours. The Energy Markets Inspectorate slams companies for poor maintenance and demands better preparedness amid new storms.

Many Swedish households have been hit by sharply increased electricity bills for January due to high electricity prices and raised network fees. Prices in northern Sweden have been almost four times higher than last year, leading to concern among customers. Grid companies like Vattenfall and Ellevio justify the increases with necessary investments in infrastructure.

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Electricity prices in Sweden will remain high for an extended period due to low reservoir levels and cold weather, according to analysts. In Bergs municipality in Jämtland, the local government is offering installment plans and investigating its own support to assist residents and associations. Criticism is directed at the national government for lacking state aid.

Japan's ten major power utilities announced plans to lower electricity rates by over ¥1,000 for standard households starting January 2026, supported by resumed government subsidies to offset inflation. This continues intermittent subsidies in place since 2023, targeting the January to March period when heating demand typically increases.

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Storm Johannes has struck large parts of Sweden with strong winds causing widespread power outages and fallen trees. Thousands of households in Gävleborg and Västernorrland remain without electricity, and three people have died. Residents in affected areas are helping each other with cleanup and seeking warmth at safety points.

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A major power outage struck parts of Södermalm and Gamla stan in Stockholm on Monday evening, leaving over 20,000 customers without electricity for nearly three hours. Power was restored just after 9:45 p.m. following manual repairs. The cause was a technical fault in a power cable.

 

 

 

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