Customers across the UK are in £3.2bn worth of debt to energy firms before this winter's price hikes have even hit, a leading industry figure has told Sky News.

The chief executive of trade association Energy UK, Emma Pinchbeck, said the number could be even higher than her organisation's statistics state, and the colder months could bring even more problems due to the end of customer support schemes brought in through the energy crisis and a further "build up of debt".

Her comments came as energy firms met government ministers for a roundtable in Downing Street on Wednesday to discuss how both sides could help people struggling with their bills this winter.

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Concerns have been raised in light of the 10% rise in the energy price cap due to kick in in October, as well as the government's decision to scrap the winter fuel allowance for pensioners who do not receive pension credit.

Ms Pinchbeck also attended the meeting and said it was "productive", with all parties coming to the table with "good ideas" and accepting there was a "shared responsibility for managing... [and] fixing the problem".

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She said as a result she was "confident" a solution could be found and expected "practical steps" to come from the gathering - though she would not reveal what.

However, she pointed to calls from Energy UK itself for a doubling the warm homes discount for the most vulnerable in the short-term, and stronger investment into green technologies to bring prices down in the future.

Ms Pinchbeck said overall she wanted to see "something enduring for people so we are not doing this meeting every September when the price cap goes up".

Image: Chief executive of Energy UK Emma Pinchbeck told Sky News it was not 'tenable' to carry on as we are. Pic: PA

The trade association boss added: "It cannot be tenable now to have £3bn worth of debt sat on supplier books and no clear solution to that, whilst also knowing that we have got millions of customers struggling with the high costs of energy, both this winter and on an ongoing basis, and not have clear solutions to that either.

"We can't keep going as we are. I have been doing this job for five years and every winter I end up talking to the public about how worried we are about people's energy bills.

"We know from our own data and from Citizens Advice that debt is getting worse, and that debt is currently carried by suppliers and funded by all of our energy bills, and there is an economic cost to that as well as a social cost to that and we need a solution for it."

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