skeptik wrote:Keepz wrote: That's what has encouraged billions of quids' worth of investment in new supply capability, such as the new pipelines, new LNG import infrastructure, new gas storage capacity which has been delivered and continues to be delivered, by the market, in this country.
Unfortunately where that gas is going to come from has not until fairly recently been given a lot of thought. That's what I mean by a failure of govt in energy security. I don't think 'Build it and the gas will come' is going to work for much longer.
Well, but the new infrastructure isn't being built on that basis. It's being built by people who export to the UK, eg the Norwegians built the pipeline from Norway at the same time as they are expanding production from the Norwegian gas fields, and the Qataris are building the new LNG import facility at Milford Haven at the same time as they are finishing building a new liquefaction plant in Qatar, so presumably they do intend to use the capacity and have got a pretty good idea where the gas is going to come from.
The trend seems to be towards everything getting locked up in long term supply contracts. The Chinese are out there buying up the world. Even the Russians want to buy everything that Libya can produce. Apart from that, one day the world will hit peak gas. Then what? Ever increasing reliance on natural gas out to 2050 as envisaged by Govt white papers only a couple of years ago? Doesn't seem likely now.
Other examples: the Algerians are on record as saying they want to move more towards shorter term contracts, which actually makes much more sense from a producer's point of view; particularly if you accept the powerswitch thesis that gas prices are only going to go up and up, why would a gas producer want to lock themselves into a long term contract - unless at a price so high that they can be sure they'll be better off over the whole term than selling on the spot market?
Keepz wrote:
Do you seriously think this Government, any Government, could have found such money and delivered such huge infrastructure projects in a comparable time?
£100 billion was found by the Govt at the drop of a hat to nationalize one dodgy bank, Northern Rock. Personally I consider the energy security of the country to far more important. Huge infrastructure projects are built by engineering companies who have the expertise in delivering huge infrastructure projects, whether the client is a government department or a gas supply company.
But those engineering companies are already fully occupied building projects for the gas supply companies - those that are not building electricity generating stations, that is. You are clearly aware of more examples of Government-financed projects delivering to time and to budget than I am ...
So the energy supply industry has every incentive to balance the costs and the benefits of security of supply. Government would have to do the same - unless you think the objective should be guaranteed security, no matter what, under any circumstances, at any cost?
Pretty much, Yes. Without long term energy security UK plc goes down the drain. Much more important I think than wasting billions on a nuclear detterent or bailing out dodgy banks.
"Pretty much" but not totally then? You'd accept that if the position was that we were facing an 0.00002% probability of a 5% shortfall for two days this winter, it wouldn't be worth spending £3,000,000,000 to reduce that to an 0.00001% probability of a 3% shortfall for one day? So we are agreed that it is a question of balancing costs and benefits - it is just that you feel the market doesn't value security of supply highly enough?
You seem to see "the market" as consisting only of a supply side for whom providing energy security represents a cost. I've tried to demonstrate that in fact there are mechanisms in place to ensure that energy
insecurity also represents a cost to suppliers so that they are incentivised to ensure that the supply is there. If you really think it is in the suppliers' interest to keep supply short, how do you account for the fact that the gas supply industry has spent a single penny on new gas supply infrastructure, let alone billions of pounds? Shouldn't they rather be saving that money or even using it to block up the pipes?
And of course the market also has a demand side, to which security of supply is a benefit. In the case of domestic consumers, they have no option but to pay the price for a very high standard of supply security - they will be the very last to be cut off when all others are gone.
In the case of larger industrial consumers, they have the opportunity to decide for themselves how much
they value security of supply and therefore what
they think it is worth paying for it, by choosing whether to buy forward, take out long term contracts, rely on buying on the day, invest in their own stocks, switch away from gas altogether etc etc. This balance will be different in each case. Now what business is it of the Government's to decide that actually they must all have the same standard of security, and that more of the taxpayers' money should be spent on providing it for them than they would want to pay for it themselves?