That this House notes with grave concern average annual spending on energy per household has breached £1,200, that energy providers' profits have risen from £557 million in 2003 to over £5,000 million today, that these companies are receiving unearned profits and that the new price rises could increase those in fuel poverty beyond six million people; welcomes the Government's energy package of long-term measures worth £900 million over three years, but notes that given the huge price increases this will not go far enough to end fuel poverty; further notes that the Government is legally bound to do all that is reasonably possible to eradicate fuel poverty for vulnerable households by 2010; furthermore notes that, despite the recent sharp falls in the oil price, these decreases are not being passed on to consumers by the energy companies; further notes that in 1997 the Government levied a windfall tax on the unearned profits of the privatised utilities and that in 2008 the inflated price of energy continues to make massive unearned windfall profits for the energy companies; and requests the Government urgently to introduce a new windfall tax, the revenues from which should be ring-fenced and targeted at homes in fuel poverty and used to start an adequately funded programme of home insulation to protect people from future price rises.