Gas alert as demand and prices rise
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Same item of news on this site.www.financialadvice.co.uk - 11/01/10
UK gas reserves down to just six hours
Extreme cold weather in Norway caused the closure of a Norwegian gas supply processing centre which has impacted on the UK. Yet another National Grid gas alert has been issued and this time the UK government is appealing in desperation for extra gas to be pumped into the UK system from overseas. There is now a real danger that the supply of gas to the UK could be crippled in the days ahead unless alternative arrangements can be made immediately.
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That's true, but it is also a problem for all policy approaches to limiting carbon emissions. A carbon tax or a regulatory, technology-prescriptive approach would also be difficult to enforce internationally and useless if it weren't. The beauty of carbon trading is that it would allow a transfer of money from developed, polluting nations to less developed ones and should therefore be more attractive to the latteremordnilap wrote:Keepz wrote:The same approach worked very effectively in the US with sulphur emissionsCoincidentally, I just read what Annie Leonard wrote: Mr. Crocker sees two modern-day problems in using a cap-and-trade system to address the global greenhouse-gas issue. The first is that carbon emissions are a global problem with myriad sources. Cap-and-trade, he says, is better suited for discrete, local pollution problems. ‘It is not clear to me how you would enforce a permit system internationally,’ he says. ‘There are no institutions right now that have that power.’
Don't really understand this point or how it doesn't equally apply to a proposed carbon tax (how do you determine what is the appropriate level?) or a regulatory approach (how do you determine which technologies to mandate, and how much of them?) - I would have thought that establishing a limit for emissions would be a scientific rather than an economic issueThe other problem, Mr. Crocker says, is that quantifying the economic damage of climate change -- from floods to failing crops -- is fraught with uncertainty. One estimate puts it at anywhere between 5% and 20% of global gross domestic product. Without knowing how costly climate change is, nobody knows how tight a grip to put on emissions…
Amended Guardian article now back on line:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010 ... ports-fail
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010 ... ports-fail
An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that UK stored gas reserves had fallen to six hours. After further briefings with National Grid, we understand the figure is actually seven days. The discrepancy resulted from a misunderstanding of how the supply data was presented. We apologise for the error.
The UK had about seven days of gas supplies – or just over 3,000m cubic metres – in storage today based on current demand levels, according to the National Grid. National Grid insists that there are plenty of mainly market based measures that can be taken to make sure the country does not run out of gas. The Conservatives, however, say there are not enough safeguards in place if the gas market fails.
Gas demand is still high. Predicted today to be 405 MCM.
Gas balancing alert level is 428.
We have 3 days left in Medium Range Storage. After today it will be 2 days.
http://marketinformation.natgrid.co.uk/ ... lorer.aspx
Gas balancing alert level is 428.
We have 3 days left in Medium Range Storage. After today it will be 2 days.
http://marketinformation.natgrid.co.uk/ ... lorer.aspx
Although the weather is clear, temperatures are still sub zero at night in most of the country.
It's not summer yet by a long chalk.
It's not summer yet by a long chalk.
Andy Hunt
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
Eternal Sunshine wrote: I wouldn't want to worry you with the truth.
- emordnilap
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Below freezing here in the west of Ireland too for the best part of three months. Not an Irish winter by any stretch.
Following as it does hard on the heels of once-in-hundred-year floods, I can't help wonder that the weather has broken.
Following as it does hard on the heels of once-in-hundred-year floods, I can't help wonder that the weather has broken.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
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I seem to remember in the past that seasons were more sharply defined. Winter should be cold.emordnilap wrote:Below freezing here in the west of Ireland too for the best part of three months. Not an Irish winter by any stretch.
Following as it does hard on the heels of once-in-hundred-year floods, I can't help wonder that the weather has broken.
For the past three years it has been almost a monoseason.
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-7.2C here Monday morning. The frogs haven't started spawning yet and the dafs are only just budding. The Japanese onions, planted last autumn, aren't really moving yet either.
I'm going to buy a set of snow chains for my Discovery for next winter. I nearly got stuck in the snow towing a trailer full of hay this year so snow chains will give me peace of mind for next winter, when I think we will have more snow.
We've got some bubble wrap which I'm going to put down in the garden to warm some beds up to get some early seeds in.
I'm going to buy a set of snow chains for my Discovery for next winter. I nearly got stuck in the snow towing a trailer full of hay this year so snow chains will give me peace of mind for next winter, when I think we will have more snow.
We've got some bubble wrap which I'm going to put down in the garden to warm some beds up to get some early seeds in.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
- Totally_Baffled
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