This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/oct/28/national-grid-no-winter-blackout
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
National Grid: no risk of winter blackouts after fires and plant closures | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
National Grid has moved to reassure households and businesses it will have enough power supply even in a cold winter after a spate of fires and power plant closures helped to cut spare capacity to an eight-year low. | |
In its winter outlook, the operator of pipes and pylons said the electricity margin – the difference between expected peak demand and available supply – has fallen to 4.1%, from a restated 5.9% last year, because of planned generator closures, breakdowns and delays to new plants. | |
This year’s figure going into the winter months is the lowest since 2006-07 when the margin was 3%. The margin built steadily to reach 16.8% three years ago, but has fallen each year since. | |
National Grid and its regulator, Ofgem, said there was little threat of blackouts or the need for other emergency measures. | |
Rachel Fletcher, Ofgem’s senior partner for markets, said: “The message from this seminar is that there is no increased risk of blackouts.” | |
National Grid announced it was close to signing up three power stations to help fill the gap left by closures, breakdowns and delays, and said the cost to consumers of paying for extra capacity and for companies to adjust their consumption if necessary will be about £1 per household. | |
Concerns about winter energy supplies increased last week when a fire broke out at Didcot B, a power station near Oxford that serves about 1m households. The fire cut Didcot B’s output by half and there is no date yet for restoring capacity. | |
The fire at the 1.4 gigawatt (GW) plant was the third at a fossil fuel-fired power station this year. After a blaze in February, E.ON decided not to bring back online one 370MW unit at its Ironbridge power station in Shropshire. In July, SSE shut two units at its 1GW Ferrybridge coal plant in West Yorkshire following a fire. Barking power station in east London has also closed, and EDF Energy took two of its nuclear plants out of service in August after a fault was found. | |
In response, National Grid has enlisted plants at Littlebrook in Kent, Rye House in Hertfordshire and Peterhead in Aberdeenshire to run if needed. The operator of Britain’s electricity and gas systems said extra capacity negotiated with companies would add 1.1GW and take the electricity margin to a more comfortable 6.1%. | |
Only if that capacity were used up would National Grid be forced to consider dimming lights, telling companies to reduce energy use or other drastic measures, Fletcher said. | |
Cordi O’Hara, National Grid’s director of market operations, said: “We cannot be complacent and will be monitoring the situation through to spring next year. The electricity margin has decreased compared to recent years, but the outlook remains manageable and well within the reliability standard set by government.” | |
Ahead of the report, Ed Davey, the energy secretary, sought to reassure households that the country’s lights wouldn’t go out after industry analysts warned that capacity reductions had left the UK vulnerable to unwelcome surprises. | |
But Dan Lewis, energy policy adviser at the Institute of Directors, said energy policy was a shambles and that the government had distorted the market with green taxes and subsidies that deterred investment in fossil-fuel plants when the price of coal was falling. | |
“The plant retirement rate has simply outrun the replacement rate. Paying businesses to cut their power use at peak times to keep the lights on is no way to run a modern economy.” | |
Gas supplies remain strong after last year’s mild winter, with gas capacity higher than the maximum expected demand, National Grid said. | Gas supplies remain strong after last year’s mild winter, with gas capacity higher than the maximum expected demand, National Grid said. |
Tensions between Russia and Ukraine could disrupt supplies, even though the UK does not receive gas from Russia. But Britain could import liquefied natural gas to maintain supplies even if there was a cold winter and all exports from Russia were disrupted, National Grid said. | Tensions between Russia and Ukraine could disrupt supplies, even though the UK does not receive gas from Russia. But Britain could import liquefied natural gas to maintain supplies even if there was a cold winter and all exports from Russia were disrupted, National Grid said. |
Previous version
1
Next version