It clearly does say one single or one double. Look in the top/left square, my friend.
You've misunderstood but I perhaps wasn't clear, when I said ' It doesn't', I was agreeing....it doesn't.
The trouble is, anyone can change that single to a double at a later stage... you now have two doubles.
That would be their problem, it is a requirement that before alterations are made the suitability of the installation is assessed. Anyone can connect a cooker to a lighting circuit and change the fuse to a 50a, you cant blame that on the person who installed the lighting circuit.
You do know the current carrying capacity of 2.5 mm is a lot more than 13 amps, right? You can easily use a 20 amp breaker to protect a full set of double sockets on a single 2.5 mm circuit.
It is more than 13a, it is around 26a. But the idea of using a 13a FCU to fuse down a spur from a ring circuit is to prevent a potential heavy loading at one point on the ring. Rings function most efficiently when loading is evenly distributed throughout the circuit, of course in practice 2x 13a heaters could be plugged into one twin on the ring and upset that balance. But if a number of points are to be wired on a single spur it would be bad practice and non-compliant to enable a heavy loading at that point by fusing it at 20a. You are correct that a 20a breaker can be used to fuse any number of points on a single 2.5mm circuit, but that is a radial, a separate circuit, a spur off a 32a ring circuit is a completely different thing