Category: Daily News

The Telegraph Don’t Understand Battery Storage

By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Philip Bratby

Oh dear – another dreadful article in the Telegraph!

 

 image

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/07/26/miliband-eyes-battery-bonanza-to-cut-wind-farm-costs/

Bonanza! Cut wind farm costs!

They make it sound like we’re all going to be better off!

According to the Telegraph:

Ed Miliband will plough hundreds of millions of pounds into battery storage technology as the cost of ordering wind farms to shut down spirals out of control.

GB Energy, which is backed by the taxpayer, will use a chunk of its newly minted budget to invest in energy storage systems as households and businesses are forced to foot the bill to prevent the creaking power grid from getting congested.

More than £700m has been spent so far this year on switching off wind farms to avoid overloading the grid as well as firing up alternatives to keep the lights on. This is up from about £450m over the same period in 2024, with the money ultimately coming from energy bills.

Officials are also keen to ensure clean power remains reliable during periods of high demand.

An industry source said: “How do you get around the fact that the wind blows one day, doesn’t blow the next? They have to keep switching off the turbines because they can’t store the energy. GB Energy think they’ve got a role to play in trying to fund the innovation.”

Far from cutting costs, however, building lots of battery storage will simply add to them, as NESO’s Clean Power 2030 plan admitted:

image

https://www.neso.energy/publications/clean-power-2030

As well as the capital and operating costs, battery storage is not 100% efficient – it loses a certain amount of electricity every time it cycles. These are known as round-trip losses. A cost of £10/MWh works out at £3 billion a year on current generation levels, all of which will get added onto power bills.

Meanwhile constraint payments will carry on rising regardless – NESO reckon growth in wind and solar power will add another £15/MWh to the cost of electricity, £4.5 billion a year by 2030:

image

But there is also another, more serious misunderstanding in the Telegraph report, one that is commonplace in the media. This is that storage will keep the electricity flowing for the days and weeks when the wind stops blowing.

According to the Telegraph:

There is particular need for so-called long-duration storage that can be deployed over weeks rather than days to counter periods of “dunkelflaute”, when cloudy skies and stagnant wind conditions reduce the output of renewables.

Under Mr Miliband’s plan for a clean power system by 2030, the amount of long-duration energy storage is expected to rise from about three gigawatts today to between four and six gigawatts – enough to power millions of homes.

Traditional lithium ion batteries are not ideal for this owing to their high cost and relatively short-term output, as well as degradation over time and the large numbers that would need to be built.

Possible alternatives include “flow” batteries, which store energy in liquid electrolytes, pumped hydro storage, compressed air storage, heat storage such as thermal bricks or molten salt, and caves that can be used to store hydrogen.

Apart from hydrogen storage, which is not feasible at scale in the next decade at least, this “long-duration storage” does not exist. As usual, the Telegraph talk about “six gigawatts”, but don’t mention how much electricity this will supply.

Pumped storage, for instance, might supply power for a few hours at most; compressed air is no better.

NESO inform us though that 5-8 GW will store 50-99 GWh, in other words about ten hours supply. This of course will be irrelevant when we are short of power for days on end.

Moreover, 50 GWh would only be enough to run the grid for an hour.

image

It is time that the Telegraph started asking real questions about Miliband’s mad agenda, instead of these silly, puff pieces.

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July 27, 2025 at 03:56AM

Cutting the threat of giant wildfires by axing harmful Clinton-era forest policies

“Instead of protecting forests,” Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins wrote of the Roadless Rule in The Desert News, “it has trapped them in a cycle of neglect and devastation."

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July 27, 2025 at 03:40AM

Stop These Things’ Weekly Round Up: 27 July 2025

Slash the massive subsidies and the so-called wind and solar ‘industries’ would disappear in a heartbeat. The chaotic delivery of part-time power has never made any sense. And the world is waking up to that unassailable fact.

Which brings us to this week’s roundup, starting the team from Jo Nova reporting on BP’s moment of sanity, resulting in its withdrawal from what was once pitched as one of “the largest renewable projects in the world”. The delusion was built on the great ‘green hydrogen’ hoax, and therefore ready for an inevitable financial disaster, which BP sensible chose to avoid.

BP abandons Australia’s biggest renewables project (26GW and $55b) to focus on oil and gas
Jo Nova Blog
Jo Nova
25 July 2025

The Trump administration, true to the President’s word, has launchedan all-out attack on the great wind and solar fraud, starting with the relocation have market distorting subsidies and preferences for part-time power generators.

Ending Market Distorting Subsudues for Unreliable, Foreign-Controlled Energy Sources
The White House
Executive Orders
7 July 2025

Naveen Athrappully delivers a timely warning of the clear and present danger that chaotic wind and solar present to America’s power grid, increasing the risk of mass blackouts of the kind recently suffered by wind and solar obsessed Spain.

Existing US Energy Generation Retirements Increase Blackout Risk by 100 Times in 2030: DOE
The Epoch Times
Naveen Athrappully
8 July 2025

Eric Worrall reports on how America’s dominance in the field of AI helps spell the death knell for wind and solar in the US given the exponential increase in the demand for reliable, uninterrupted and affordable power supplies.

How the Trump AI Action Plan will Wreck Green Energy
Watts Up With That?
Eric Worrall
24 July 2025

David Wojick delivers a helpful reality check, setting out why the “batteries will save us” meme is just another ludicrous attempt by rent-seekers to beguile the public into believing that we will all soon be running on nothing but sunshine and breezes.

Making PJM all wind and solar would cost over $2.4 trillion in battery backup
CFACT
David Wojick
12 July 2025

John Hinderaker wraps up this week with a report on the environmental destruction and chaos caused by these things wherever they operate.

Environmental Disaster
Powerline
John Hinderaker
11 July 2025

Stay tuned, STT will be back next week with more.

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July 27, 2025 at 02:34AM

Small Modular Reactors are a game-changer for Africa and the world

Africa deserves the same opportunity for development that the West took for granted, unburdened by a green agenda that keeps the continent energy-poor and dependent.

Guest essay by Ronald Stein, Dr. Robert Jeffrey and Olivia Vaughan

For South Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa where electricity deficits stifle growth, Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) offer a promising solution.

With the Trump Administration poised to reshape global electricity policy, the U.S. has a unique opportunity to lead the West in supporting Africa’s electricity-driven progress through SMRs. The Trump administration should lead Western nations in abandoning hypocritical restrictions and thus become a collaborator in advancing African electricity security

The Electricity Crisis in Sub-Saharan Africa

Sub-Saharan Africa faces a dire electricity crisis. Over 600 million people—more than 40% of the continent’s population—lack access to electricity, a figure projected to rise to 657 million by 2030 without intervention. This deficit hampers industrialization, healthcare, and education, trapping millions in poverty. South Africa, with its Koeberg Nuclear Power Station is the only country in Africa with operational nuclear power, yet even here, electricity reliability remains a challenge.

The West has built its prosperity on an abundant supply chain of products and transportation fuels made from fossil fuels, and abundant electricity. Now, through the Marshall Plan, it pressures Africa to adopt renewable-heavy policies that prioritizes climate goals over developmental reality. Solar and wind can only generate intermittent electricity and is costly in regions with limited grid infrastructure, unable to deliver the consistent baseload power required for industrial growth.

Forcing Africa into a renewable-only path risks perpetuating electricity poverty, a form of hypocrisy that is bullying the world’s poor.

Small Modular Reactors: A Game-Changer for Africa

Enter Small Modular Reactors, a technology ideally suited to address Africa’s electricity challenges. Unlike traditional large-scale nuclear plants, which require significant upfront costs and extensive water for cooling, SMRs are compact, scalable, and designed for flexibility. With outputs typically ranging from 10 to 300 MW, SMRs can power small towns, mining operations, or urban centers, making them perfect for Africa’s diverse and often remote landscapes.

South Africa has emerged as a global leader in SMR development, particularly through its Pebble Bed Modular Reactor (PBMR) and its successor, the HTMR-100. Initiated in the 1990s, the PBMR uses helium gas for cooling, eliminating the need for large water bodies—a critical advantage in arid regions. The HTMR-100, developed privately after the PBMR project stalled in 2010 due to financial constraints, is designed for rapid deployment and affordability, with off-the-shelf components reducing costs. A single unit can power a large town or mining complex, and its fuel can be safely stockpiled for years, ensuring reliability even in remote areas.

Recent developments signal a revival. South Africa’s Energy Minister has committed to a 2,500 MW nuclear build program, explicitly endorsing SMRs.

The Nuclear Renaissance and U.S. Leadership

The global resurgence of nuclear power, spurred by the Trump Administration’s recent executive orders, aligns with Africa’s needs. By addressing regulatory, supply, and siting challenges, these orders have ignited a nuclear stock rally, with companies like Nano Nuclear, Oklo, and NuScale leading the charge. As U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum declared, “Mark this day on your calendar. This is going to turn the clock back on over 50 years of overregulation.” Whether this marks a true nuclear renaissance or a speculative bubble, the market’s optimism backed by bipartisan support, signals a shift toward nuclear power as a reliable, clean electricity source.

For Africa, Generation IV SMRs offer a transformative opportunity. Their modular design allows factory-based construction and on-site assembly, reducing costs and deployment times compared to traditional reactors. In countries with nuclear experience like South Africa, SMRs could be deployed in as little as about 5 years. Technologies like the HTMR-100, with passive safety features, enhance safety and minimize risks, addressing concerns about radiation and proliferation.

The Role of the Trump Administration

The Trump Administration’s pro-nuclear stance presents a golden opportunity. By investing in SMR projects, the U.S. can support Africa’s electricity goals while fostering economic partnerships. It’s time to reject Western bullying and prioritize Africa’s development, countering its reliance on foreign powers like Russia and China, which dominate nuclear exports to Africa.

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) relies on the Linear No-Threshold (LNT) model, established in the 1950s, to regulate radiation exposure, assuming all doses linearly increase cancer risk. However, this model is criticized for ignoring biological evidence of DNA repair, apoptosis, and adaptive responses that mitigate low-dose radiation effects, potentially overestimating harm from nuclear power plant releases by orders of magnitude.

Studies, including those from high-background radiation areas and animal models, suggest low doses may stimulate protective responses (hormesis). The LNT model’s adoption, influenced by historical anti-nuclear biases rather than low-dose data, drives overly conservative regulations, inflating costs and public fear.

The NRC should urgently review LNT against threshold or hormesis models, integrating modern biological and epidemiological evidence, to ensure regulations reflect current science and balance safety with practicality.

Seizing the Moment

Africa’s right to develop is undeniable, and SMRs are a critical tool to achieve it. South Africa’s leadership in SMR technology, coupled with growing interest across Sub-Saharan Africa, signals a path to electricity security and economic growth. The Trump Administration can lead the West in supporting this vision, dismantling restrictive green mandates and investing in Africa’s nuclear future. Denying Africa access to electricity is not justice—it’s a betrayal. By championing SMRs, the U.S. can help power Africa’s rise, ensuring prosperity for the continent and stability for the world. The time to act is now.

Originally published July 21, 2025, at America Out Loud NEWS


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July 27, 2025 at 12:06AM