Guys,
David Strahan published an article in the Telegraph at the time of the Ofgem report.
It appears that they (power generators) have taken the easy route and intend to plug the energy gap with gas fired power plants. However, this leaves us with almost all of our eggs in the one basket. Any disruption to gas supply (not that that's ever happened recently ;-) will severely disrupt our ability to generate power.
The full article, which looks at the UK's increasing gas insecurity, is here
http://www.davidstrahan.com/blog/?p=536#more-536Figures from New Power, an industry journal, show that 15GW of new gas fired stations are either under construction or have received planning permission, with a further 15GW in the wings. Editor Dominic Maclaine says “there is a new dash for gas in power generation”. That is likely to raise the proportion of electricity generated from gas even further, and increase Britain’s vulnerability in the case of supply disruptions. In that case, without a major increase in storage capacity, future gas supply crises could also leave us in the dark.
If, as "New Power" suggests, that 15GW of CCGT plant have already been approved for planning or under construction - then clearly the industry doesn't give a fig for energy security. It has recently been shown, that it doesn't matter whether the price of gas goes from 30p to 60p, the industry will always find a way of charging its customers more. Why is it that we see so many happy British Gas adverts on TV these days - claiming that they are keeping the planet green?
Here's a 2006 Government White Paper outlining the necessity to maintain a varied generation mix
http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file32007.pdfAnd lo and behold - the same Government department (BERR) already knew in 2007 about 18GW of CCGT that were in various stages of planning and development.
http://www.berr.gov.uk/files/file41816.pdfThey snuck this one under the radar, whilst every eco-activist in the UK was getting hot and bothered about Kingsnorth - what a great smokescreen that was - no pun intended. Useless tosser Malcolm Wicks was Energy Minister then - I wonder how much they paid him?
CCGT running on natural gas is the cheapest option for baseload generation - not only in the cost per unit, but the cost of the plant and the decommissioning costs - so no doubt got the shareholders' votes
http://www.raeng.org.uk/news/publications/list/reports/Cost_Generation_Commentary.pdfThe question is whether E.On wil stick to their guns and build the pair of 800MW super-critical IGCC coal plants at Kingsnorth, or will they be converted to CCGT? E.On are probably waiting for the recession to end, and keep their powder dry - and see what's happening to gas prices.
This is the second dash for gas - the generators have already decided their preferred energy strategy, and are leading the UK into a precarious position of energy insecurity. Ofgem are toothless to prevent this, in the same way that the banking regulators were unable to regulate the bankers from initiating the credit crisis.
I think this needs to be debated in public - the Government (whichever one), needs to be told that there is a major energy crisis looming. Perhaps they already know?
Ken