Occasionally, one comes across a story so mind-blowingly unexpected and
out-of-left-field that it seems hard for readers to take on board that it is
true. Such is the story I first reported here last month, under the heading,
“Our lights will stay on, but it’ll cost us a fortune”, about the scheme being
devised by the National Grid to solve what has long been the most intractable
problem created by the Government’s plan to see the best part of £110 billion
spent in seven years on building tens of thousands more wind turbines – namely,
how to keep our national grid “balanced” when it has to cope with all those
unpredictably wild fluctuations in the speed of the wind.
The answer National Grid has come up with, only made possible by the latest
computer technology and “cloud software”, is to hook up thousands of diesel
generators, remotely controlled by the grid, to provide almost instantly
available back-up for when the wind drops. As we can see from recent reports,
such as the National Grid’s draft consultation on “Demand Side Balancing Reserve
and Supplemental Balancing Reserve”, this is now taking off into the weirdest
and most ambitious scheme yet called into being by our politicians’ obsession
with wind turbines. As uncovered by the tireless research of my colleague,
Richard North, on his EU Referendum blog, owners of diesel generators are being
incentivised with offers of astronomic fees to make them available to the grid –
subsidies equivalent to up to 12 times the going rate for conventional
electricity, and even, on very rare occasions, up to £15,000 per megawatt hour
(MWh), or 300 times the normal rate of £50 per MWh.
Read the entire article here, and Richard North's comments here.
Read the entire article here, and Richard North's comments here.
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