Renewable energy is a blackout risk, warns National Grid after chaos during biggest outage in a decade

From This is MONEY

  • Company has downplayed the role of wind energy in the power cut
  • In April a study warned renewable power sources could risk network’s ‘stability’
  • Half UK’s power generated from wind at one point on the day the power failed

By Helen Cahill For The Mail On Sunday

Published: 18:01 EDT, 17 August 2019 | Updated: 07:10 EDT, 18 August 2019

Boss of the National Grid John Pettigrew said the outage was a ‘once-in-30-years’ eventBoss of the National Grid John Pettigrew said the outage was a ‘once-in-30-years’ event

Boss of the National Grid John Pettigrew said the outage was a ‘once-in-30-years’ event.

National Grid had evidence that the shift to renewable energy was putting Britain’s electricity supply at risk months before the biggest blackout in a decade, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

The company, which is responsible for keeping the lights on, has downplayed the role of wind energy in the power cut that caused widespread chaos earlier this month.

John Pettigrew, chief executive of the FTSE 100 firm, described the outage as a ‘once-in-30-years’ event and said there was ‘nothing to indicate there is anything to do with the fact that we are moving to more wind or more solar’.

Yet in April, National Grid published research warning that using more renewable power sources posed a threat to the network’s ‘stability’.

In a report based on a £6.8 million research project, National Grid admitted that renewables increased the ‘unpredictability and volatility’ of the power supply which ‘could lead to faults on the electricity network’.

The revelations come as energy regulator Ofgem and the Government continue to investigate the causes of the blackout.

A report due out this week is expected to show the outage was caused by a series of failures, including a lightning strike which led to the almost simultaneous shutdown of two power stations.

A gas-fired power station at Little Barford, Bedfordshire, and the Hornsea offshore wind farm in the North Sea both went offline just before 5pm on August 9.

That caused the electricity network’s frequency – the rate at which power is transmitted to users – to drop below 50 Hz. Equipment can be damaged if it is higher or lower than this level.

To maintain frequency, local distribution networks were forced to cut supply in some areas.

Full story here.

via Watts Up With That?

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August 19, 2019 at 08:29AM

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