
That’s more a statement of fact than a claim, but climate obsessives often ignore inconvenient truths. The proposal is for ‘peaker’ type plants (like this) to replace some of the UK’s ageing baseload ones.
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The UK will face “blackouts” without building new gas power stations, ministers have claimed.
The government has said that while it will continue to move forward with its net zero targets and a focus on renewables, gas was needed as a “back-up” – with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak saying climate goals must be reached “in a sustainable way that doesn’t leave people without energy on a cloudy, windless day”, reports Sky News.
Energy Secretary Claire Coutinho will outline the plans for new stations in a speech later today, which include a full review of the electricity market and changes to the law to make the plants ready convert to low-carbon alternatives.
But Greenpeace said the plan would make the country “more dependent on the very fossil fuel that sent our bills rocketing and the planet’s temperature soaring”. [Talkshop comment – hyperbolic nonsense].
Electricity demand is increasing as the UK electrifies things like heating and cars, and the population grows.
Officials have been reviewing how to make sure supply keeps up with demand, is reliable, and reaches the right areas of the country.
Today the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said it was clear the UK would need new backup gas capacity to provide power that can be fired up on demand, on days when it isn’t windy or sunny enough to get electricity from renewables.
That’s also because some gas plants are due to retire in the coming years.
The commitment to renewed unabated gas was long expected, and the energy industry welcomed the reassurance on how to direct its investment.
But some analysts warned extra gas is the wrong solution to the question of how to meet increasing demand and provide flexibility, and said it was a reflection of failure in other areas of energy security policy.
‘We must be realistic’
In a speech today at Chatham House, Ms Coutinho is expected to say: “There are no easy solutions in energy, only trade-offs.
“And so, as we continue to move towards clean energy, we must be realistic.”
[Talkshop comment – ‘net zero’ and realism don’t co-exist too well].
Full report here.
via Tallbloke’s Talkshop
March 12, 2024 at 11:46AM
