DaveS wrote:I sense that they are now waking up and realising that there is a serious problem.
I was listening to an interview with Mike O'Brien, the Energy Minister on
R4 Today on Wednesday. He was asked to respond to the views reported earlier of experts warning that this country will face an unacceptable risk of major blackouts in less than 10 years unless policy is radically improved. He responded that the National Grid have published data that there would be a 37% capacity increase by 2015 and that contrary to the lights going out, his government would "make them burn brighter".
The National Grid document he is referring to is the 7 year plan from 2008 to 2015 which shows a capacity currently of 80GW increasing to 110GW by 2015. An increase of 30GW.
However, of that increase, 12GW is wind power and, unless all that power is available between 6 and 8pm every day, it can not be included as capacity available to meet maximum demand. 13GW comes from new Combined Cycle Gas plants; 1GW from Holland and the remaining 4GW is from various other sources including 1.6GW from an IGCC (carbon capture) plant at Blyth.
The capacity from nuclear and coal fired stations, 10 and 30GW respectively, is shown as constant at 40GW throughout this period and yet 2 years ago the DTI forecast that nuclear capacity would halve by 2015 and that between 15 and 25GW of coal plant capacity would have to be retired by 2016 to meet the EU Large Combustion Plant Directive (1999) which mandates the reduction of acid gas emissions, primarily SO2 and NOx, from large combustion units.
4GW of the 110GW comes not from this country but from France and Holland.
Even if you ignored these circumstances, the expectation that 40GW is going to be output from stations with a median age of 30-40yrs is risible if not treating us as idiots. Nuclear power has never achieved better than 60% utilisation and if one applied current efficiencies, the total capacity available, excluding Holland & France, in 2015 to meet maximum demand is 78GW and our current 2008 maximum demand in a normal winter will be 58GW.
The gap between capacity and demand is tiny and depends on us keeping in commission clapped out plants and, as regards our coal-fired stations, polluting everyone else in the EU.
It's reasonable to expect a Minister of the Crown to be honest. The deceit shown by O'Brien, particularly when it is his own country's future that he's traducing, is appalling.