clv101 wrote:BritDownUnder wrote:Suffice it to say that there will be no new large scale despatchable generation available in the UK before next winter.
No, but demand will likely continue to fall. Remember demand is already down by around two Hinkley C's worth since the 2005 peak. Seems to be a lot quicker and cheaper to cut demand than increase supply.
In fact it's been the falling demand, more than anything else, that has kept the lights on this last decade. It's very unlikely today's infrastructure could meet 2005 demand.
Demand has indeed fallen significantly, but I do not share your optimism that it will continue to fall.
I expect demand to remain roughly static, or perhaps to increase moderately over the next few years, for the following reasons.
A growing population, even if a change in government policy reduces FUTURE growth, consider the large number of children at present whom will grow up and consume electricity.
The growth in the private rented housing sector, electric heating tends to be favoured over gas in such premises.
Increasing popularity of electric vehicles. I do not expect any large scale or sudden switch to EVs, but consider it possible that say 1% of the population might obtain one in the next few years.
That would be very roughly 600,000 EVs. They wont all be charged at once of course, but at an average charging input of say 1kw, that is an increase in demand of 600,000kw or 0.6GW.
Increasing the maximum demand from perhaps 50GW up to 50.6GW is not that significant, but neither is it negligible.
Very significant energy savings have resulted from more efficient lighting, refrigeration, and home entertainments. Further significant gains seem unlikely, and may actually be reversed by demands for larger and more numerous appliances.
An aging population may also increase electricity demand as older people in existing rural homes find coal or logs to be too much trouble and use electric heating instead.
And of course electric public transport is slowly spreading, good for reducing pollution but also increasing electricity demand.
An electric train can use an average 1MW, a thousand more electric trains over the whole country could add perhaps 0.5GW to demand (not 1GW because they wont all draw power at the same time.)
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"