The Daily Telegraph

National Grid in plea for Belgian electricit­y

Network operator asked for urgent help to avoid blackouts amid scramble for energy across Europe

- By Rachel Millard and Matt Oliver

The National Grid was forced to issue an emergency appeal to Belgium to keep Britain’s lights on as the market was rocked by surging prices ahead of a looming winter crisis. The power network’s electricit­y system operator issued an emergency instructio­n to operators of the Nemo cable running between Belgium and the UK to make sure supplies were sent to Britain last week, after failing to secure enough in the normal market. Experts said it cast doubt on the Grid’s ability to cope.

NATIONAL GRID was forced to issue an emergency appeal to Belgium to keep Britain’s lights on as the market was roiled by surging prices ahead of a looming winter crisis.

The power network’s electricit­y system operator (ESO) issued an emergency instructio­n to operators of the Nemo cable running between Belgium and the UK to make sure supplies were sent to Britain last week, after failing to secure enough in the normal market.

Experts said it cast doubt on the Grid’s ability to cope during the “looming iceberg” of winter, when gas supplies are expected to be under far more severe pressure and Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, may cut off shipments to Europe altogether.

The Grid’s notice, issued at lunchtime on Wednesday, came as high demand in the UK and constraint­s in moving power into the South-east of England coincided with high demand on the Continent and outages in France’s nuclear fleet.

The ESO at one point on Wednesday paid an all-time high of £9,724 per MWH to import power over the Nemo cable amid a scramble for electricit­y around Europe, data from market analyst Enappsys shows.

Two days of record-breaking temperatur­es last Monday and Tuesday also put power supplies under strain. Heat reduced the efficiency of solar panels and disrupted transmissi­on lines, just as demand rose and wind power fell.

The strain triggered two automatic warning notices to the market last Monday calling for more generation to come online, with analysts at Cornwall Insight warning that demand came “very close” to outstrippi­ng supply.

The ESO said automatic market signals did not take into account all of its data and tools, and it was confident that electricit­y margins were sufficient.

It comes as the ESO is this week set to publish its early forecast for power supply and demand this winter.

Kathryn Porter, an energy consultant at Watt-logic, said: “The warnings from National Grid this week, during hot, still weather, are a sign of worse to come in winter when cold, still weather will stress the system even further.”

Britain gets most of its electricit­y from its own gas-fired power stations, nuclear plants, wind turbines, biomass and solar plants. It also trades power with the Continent through a growing web of cables capable of supplying more than 10pc of UK demand.

Supply and demand need to be constantly matched across the network to avoid blackouts, with the ESO stepping in to smooth out imbalances left by the market. The system across Europe is strained as half of France’s nuclear fleet is offline due to maintenanc­e issues.

Britain has typically imported power from France during winter to help meet its own demand. However, forward prices indicate France will “need all the power it can get” from Britain during

‘The warnings from National Grid during hot, still weather are a sign of worse to come in winter’

peak times in winter, according to Phil Hewitt, director at Enappsys. He added: “Winter is the looming iceberg.”

Describing the circumstan­ces last Wednesday, the ESO said: “We were bidding in a tight market and market prices were high that day because Europe also wanted the energy. We managed the system and kept the electricit­y flowing to the South-east.”

It added that the notices calling for more generation on Monday were “due to a combinatio­n of factors including high exports, low wind, planned plant maintenanc­e outages, higher than usual demand and a small reduction in gas generation.”

A spokesman said: “Capacity market notices are automated and do not take into account all the factors which our engineers are working on. Based on our control room’s assessment­s and submitted data, we were confident electricit­y margins were sufficient.”

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