Power Markets In Crisis

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

SEPTEMBER 17, 2021

By Paul Homewood

Alarm bells have been ringing in European and UK power markets this month, as electricity prices surge to record levels. Here day-ahead prices are triple those of a year ago, and European markets are seeing the same happening, a sign of serious instability in European grids.

The immediate trigger has been low wind speeds across much of Europe in the last few weeks, meaning reduced outputs of wind power. This has led to a shortage of power on the grid, and a consequent spiking of prices. This sort of thing occasionally happens in winter when demand is high, but is unheard of in summer months, indicating that something is going badly wrong.

But this problem is not a one-off. It is much more deep seated, and has been building up for years. UK wholesale electricity prices have doubled since this time last year. There are many factors, including rising demand for natural gas from Asian countries as they rebuild their economies. Normally this would incentivise higher production of gas, but this has been discouraged in Europe in recent years, and seemingly now also in the US.

But most of the problems in power markets have been self inflicted. Arguably the biggest factor this year has been the doubling of EU carbon prices, deliberately engineered by the EU to force fossil fuels out of the mix, in favour of renewable energy. UK carbon prices have followed suit.

As coal has the highest carbon footprint, this has encouraged the switch of generation from coal to dearer gas power, thus increasing demand for natural gas already in short supply. Both coal and gas generators have to pay this carbon price, forcing up their costs and consequently prices even further.

On top of that comes the £12bn a year cost of renewable subsidies, currently added to all of our electricity bills, equivalent to £440 per household.

Meanwhile huge tranches of reliable, dispatchable generation have been shut down both here and in Europe. In the UK, for instance, coal and oil generating capacity has dropped from 29 GW to just 6 GW in the last decade. To put this into perspective, UK demand peaks at around 50 GW, so we have lost half of this, leaving our reserves perilously low. The remaining 5 GW of coal power will also be gone in three years time.

The plan of successive governments was that new gas power plants would be built to take up the slack, but this has not happened. Gas power capacity is no higher today than it was in 2010. Because of the obscene subsidies paid to renewable generators, as well as rising carbon prices, new gas power plants are simply not economically viable. We still have 35 GW of gas capacity, the same as ten years ago, but much of this is old plant, due to close in the next decade, and there is little sign that it will be replaced.

The situation in Europe is similar, and will be exacerbated further by the forced closure of all nuclear power in Germany next year, where it still accounts for a tenth of electricity. France is also planning to phase out much of its nuclear power.

All this at a time when demand for electricity will soar because of the enforced switch to electric cars and heat pumps.

There are the inevitable calls to solve this problem with yet more intermittent renewable energy, but this can only make the power system more unstable still.

And how is Britain planning to cope with this crisis? Rely on interconnectors to import electricity from Europe!

The National Grid’s Future Energy Scenarios are based around up to 25 GW of interconnector capacity, which amounts to playing Russian Roulette with our energy security. As we have seen this month, when we are short of wind power, the rest of Northern Europe tends to be as well.

What guarantees are there then that France, say, will allow its power to be exported when they themselves are short of it. Indeed, last week Ireland shut down the Moyle interconnector to Britain, built to export surplus Irish wind power. The reason? They too were short of electricity!

To cap it all, a fire has just taken out the 2 GW interconnector between Britain and France, and it is expected to be out of action till next March.

Russian Roulette with a fully loaded pistol might be a better description!

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Bob Hoye
September 18, 2021 7:30 am

The “chickens” of politicized decision making are coming home to roost.
So many that it is darkening the skies.
An immense “Cluster Cluck”.
That with sound economic decision making would not be happening.

Jon R
September 18, 2021 8:03 am

Carbon Dioxide stole their wind i bet ya.

Peter W
Reply to  Jon R
September 18, 2021 8:24 am

Of course! CO2 is heavier than air, and therefore harder to move and create wind!

September 18, 2021 9:16 am

Just a quick BoE calculation for 17:00 BST on 18 Sep

Taking numbers from here (sorry Leo) I/we find that Wind is generating 2GW out of a possible (nameplate) 20GW

Demand is running at just shy 30GW
You work it out.

You fairly quickly realise that Boris is talking out of his backside BUT, that is what he was assured to be required = an extra 40GW

Who told him….
It is The Oldest Trick In The Book for anybody everybody tendering for UK Government contract.
i.e Come in with a low quote that ‘seems reasonable’ and then a few months later once Government is committed, start ramping up the size, cost and timescale of the project.
Costs and timescales simply ballon out of control and nobody ever seems, or is, capable of stopping it happen. Nobody. Never. Ever.

And that those pathetic little numpties fall for that same trick/scam it every time it has been played on them since virtually forever, you really do wonder.
How can ANYBODY be so completely out of their depth, incompetent, thick, gullible and naive?

edit to add.
From here:
https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/maps-and-charts/surface-pressure/

We can all see if you get there fast enough, that All of Europe and Noth Africa is becalmed
Therre is no wind anywhere in Europe as I write

Zig Zag Wanderer
Reply to  Peta of Newark
September 18, 2021 1:26 pm

Come in with a low quote that ‘seems reasonable’ and then a few months later once Government is committed, start ramping up the size, cost and timescale of the project.

I have drafted my fair share of government tender responses. The most important skill is to identify areas that they have not considered or understood. Then you specifically exclude these from the quote.

When the quote is accepted, then you can start adding the costs to address those specific areas. It’s not honest work, but it’s satisfying to shaft a government that is constantly shafting you.

Olen
September 18, 2021 9:27 am

This is deadly and intentional whether the politicians knew it or not they have acted without justification, knowledge, forethought and compassion. An abandonment of their job.

ResourceGuy
September 18, 2021 4:48 pm

You couldn’t ask for a better human caused crisis to teach some hard lessons, right Vlad?

michel
September 19, 2021 12:08 am

According to the Daily Mail today (yes, I know!), the UK is going to run out of meat in about two weeks:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10005291/Meat-supplies-run-two-weeks-Christmas-dinner-threat-gas-suppliers-warn.html

Its probably the usual Mail hysteria, but that there is an issue is not in doubt.

The problem is that they use CO2 to stun animals before slaughter. Also for dry ice. Also for packaging in preservative wrapping. They get the CO2 from fertilizer plants, where it is a byproduct.

But wind has stopped all across Europe, and its overcast, so the wind and solar power generation has slowed to a crawl. And amazingly enough, who could have predicted it, the solar panels seem to stop generating every evening now, and are offline for hours at a time!

This means that its all down to natural gas (coal having been switched off to save the planet.

Consequently the price of gas has risen. So electricity prices are rising as well. Its all risen so much that the fertilizer plants are ceasing operation, which means no CO2…

This is a real wakeup call. It shows not only that the green agenda of running the country in anything like its present form on wind and solar is impossible. It shows the extent of the changes of just about every aspect of how we live work shop and travel that that agenda requires.

The UK Cabinet is said to be having emergency meetings with the energy industry. Lets hope that someone there explains to them the concept of intermittency.

The real science (and engineering) deniers are in the green movement. But there are encouraging signs that people in politics and the media are one by one slowly coming to their senses. The first serious indicator of this was the other day when in the preamble to CP26 and in the middle of their hysterical doom-laden coverage, the BBC finally noticed how much CO2 China is emitting and suggested maybe they needed to be asked to stop.

That was an astonishing reversal. Maybe acquaintance with intermittency will produce a similar change on the part of the UK Government. Lets hope so.

michel
September 19, 2021 12:14 am

Running out of meat isn’t the end of the world as long as you know enough about nutrition to organize your diet properly. We can certainly live perfectly well as vegetarians (as vegans is much harder).

But the problem that will surface is that much of the green and vegan movement is in denial about the need to take B12 supplements if you are doing this.

There really is no choice. We, like other animals, including cows, make B12 in our gut. But unlike them we make it at a stage after where absorption of nutrients has ended.

So if you try to live on a vegan diet without taking B12 supplements, or worse still try to feed your children on such a diet, you will produce anemia.

If the UK really does start running out of meat, and if the greens really do manage to sell their vegan agenda, this denial will have really bad consequences for national health.

Almost as bad as the consequences of intermittency denial have been for the electricity supply….

Patrick MJD
September 19, 2021 1:32 am

The power market is only in crisis for the people paying.

September 19, 2021 2:26 am

This Green BS is destroying our country and culture.

Oatley
September 19, 2021 4:05 am

The Brits bought into the renewable nonsense. Let them enjoy it.

observa
September 19, 2021 8:12 am

Spain has the problem licked-

”In Spain, the government plans to put in place a windfall tax on power plant owners to create a €3bn fund which will be used to lower consumer bills.”

UK energy market crisis: what caused it and how does it affect my bills? (msn.com)

observa
Reply to  observa
September 19, 2021 6:22 pm

Can we have some of what Griff from Barcelona is having?
‘I don’t think we’ll survive the winter’: small energy suppliers call for help (msn.com)

Do you think leftys will ever work out they can control the price or quantity of something but never both together?