Daily Express

Power cut signals how a reliance on renewables is dim

- Tim Newark Political commentato­r Nuclear Power · Renewable Energy · Solar Power · Clean Tech · Ecology · Energy · Industries · Business · Spain · Portugal · United Kingdom · European Union · Ed Miliband · Reform UK · Climate Change · Environmental Economics · Conservative Party of New York

THE widespread powercuts in Spain and Portugal this week caused chaos and exposed the risks of switching almost entirely to electricit­y to power our way of life – plus the possible perils of a wholly renewable energy supply.

Spain had upped its wind and solar power when blackouts struck, just days after its grid ran entirely on green power for the first time.And while it is too early to know definitive­ly what caused the catastroph­ic Iberian outage, clearly the ability to fall back on other forms of energy generation like gas could have mitigated the impact of the cuts.

The suspicion is falling on its rising use of renewable energy, with solar and wind reaching a peak of 64% of generation earlier this week before the crash.With a cyber attack ruled out, it’s also been suggested that extreme temperatur­es might be to blame – but the weather was no warmer than in the UK.

What no one wants to question is Spain’s huge reliance on renewables, as so much capital and political will has been invested in the net zero project. Neither the EU nor the Leftwing media want this to be the explanatio­n.

BUT energy experts believe the very nature of renewable energy makes such blackouts more likely and more devastatin­g at the same time. Gas, coal and hydroelect­ricity power turbines, which keep turning even when the energy stops, create inertia that cushions the impact of any power cuts. Solar and wind power mechanisms do not have inertia and so any cut in power rapidly escalates – shutting down the whole system.

But such is the widespread belief in net zero – akin to some religious faith – that the impractica­lities of renewables have largely been overlooked in the determinat­ion to make them work, whatever the cost. Yet surely our advanced economies are too sophistica­ted to allow a faith-based energy system to predominat­e when, in our prosperous past, efficiency was the key word – giving us both cheaper and more reliable power?

The very unpredicta­bility of renewable power is its key weakness and our everyday lives should not be sacrificed on the altar of good intentions.

The expanding use of electricit­y in our day-to-day digitally run lives is another weakness revealed by the Iberian power cuts.

It was noticeable that cities almost completely ground to a halt. Shops and bars closed because their card readers didn’t work, whereas a society that still used cash would have been much more able to carry on. Restaurant­s could have stayed open, using gas hobs to cook meals. Petrol-powered cars would have outperform­ed battery-driven ones – if the traffic lights had been working.

Cash, candles and petrol, it turns out, are not so old fashioned when the lights go out. But an over-reliance on electricit­y is not only putting increased demand on our energy grids but giving us very little room for when it fails. We should not be putting all our eggs in one basket, and should be focusing instead on establishi­ng resilient energy systems with multiple sources of power, including gas, coal and nuclear, alongside renewables.

Rushing headlong towards a net zero energy nirvana is reckless and puts us all at greater risk. Labour’s Energy Minister Ed Miliband should pay attention to what happened in Spain and Portugal because it is more likely to happen in the UK as he forces us away from carbon-generated

‘In the UK a major near miss was reported at the start of the year’

power. Energy analyst Kathryn Porter says the UK grid is becoming increasing­ly unstable with its upper operationa­l limit breached “500 times in each winter season” in the past four years and a major “near miss” nationwide blackout reported at the start of the year. A SERIES of Electricit­y Margin Notices were issued in January as wind turbines failed to deliver sufficient power, leaving a spare margin of just 580MW on the 46,825GW needed to power Britain – and that’s after our gas reserves had been fired up at enormous cost.

Our reliance on electricit­y is becoming too strong now for Ed Miliband to gamble on an inherently unstable system. Political virtue signalling is becoming too much of a risk for it to carry on unchalleng­ed. The Conservati­ve Party and Reform UK have already ditched the helter-skelter race towards net zero as impractica­l.

It is time for our government to study this latest continenta­l outage and learn the right lessons from it. If we don’t pull back from the net zero abyss, we may face a dark future.

 ?? ?? CHAOS: Passengers unable to board are crammed into a Barcelona train station
CHAOS: Passengers unable to board are crammed into a Barcelona train station
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